Effect of salt substitution on community-wide blood pressure and hypertension incidence

Replacement of regular salt with potassium-enriched substitutes reduces blood pressure in controlled situations, mainly among people with hypertension. We report on a population-wide implementation of this strategy in a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial ( NCT01960972 ). The regular salt in enro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature medicine 2020-03, Vol.26 (3), p.374-378
Hauptverfasser: Bernabe-Ortiz, Antonio, Sal y Rosas, Víctor G., Ponce-Lucero, Vilarmina, Cárdenas, María K., Carrillo-Larco, Rodrigo M., Diez-Canseco, Francisco, Pesantes, M. Amalia, Sacksteder, Katherine A., Gilman, Robert H., Miranda, J. Jaime
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Replacement of regular salt with potassium-enriched substitutes reduces blood pressure in controlled situations, mainly among people with hypertension. We report on a population-wide implementation of this strategy in a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial ( NCT01960972 ). The regular salt in enrolled households was retrieved and replaced, free of charge, with a combination of 75% NaCl and 25% KCl. A total of 2,376 participants were enrolled in 6 villages in Tumbes, Peru. The fully adjusted intention-to-treat analysis showed an average reduction of 1.29 mm Hg (95% confidence interval (95% CI) (−2.17, −0.41)) in systolic and 0.76 mm Hg (95% CI (−1.39, −0.13)) in diastolic blood pressure. Among participants without hypertension at baseline, in the time- and cluster-adjusted model, the use of the salt substitute was associated with a 51% (95% CI (29%, 66%)) reduced risk of developing hypertension compared with the control group. In 24-h urine samples, there was no evidence of differences in sodium levels (mean difference 0.01; 95% CI (0.25, −0.23)), but potassium levels were higher at the end of the study than at baseline (mean difference 0.63; 95% CI (0.78, 0.47)). Our results support a case for implementing a pragmatic, population-wide, salt-substitution strategy for reducing blood pressure and hypertension incidence. A step-wedged cluster randomized trial, carried out in six villages in Tumbes, Peru, with 2,376 participants, demonstrates population-wide reductions in blood pressure, which appear to be higher in individuals with hypertension, as well as reductions in risk of hypertension by around 50% for those without hypertension at baseline, after community-wide replacement of regular salt with a potassium-enriched alternative.
ISSN:1078-8956
1546-170X
DOI:10.1038/s41591-020-0754-2