The investigation examined changes in blood pressure after administration of common antihypertensive drugs to 9,307 white subjects and 2,902 black subjects. For each drug, whites and blacks responded similarly about 90 percent of the time. These findings raise doubts about the value of using different drugs to treat whites and blacks.
According to the study's author, Ashwini Sehgal, M.D., of the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, physicians are taught that whites respond better to certain blood pressure drugs, such as beta blockers, while blacks respond better to other drugs, such as diuretics. This study sought to determine how much difference actually exists. Sehgal found that there is a small average difference between whites and blacks. However, this small difference is dwarfed by the variation within each race.
For example, there was a 1.5 point average difference between whites and blacks in response to diuretics, but the variation within each race was 6.2 points. The large variation means that some patients will respond well while others won't. However, race plays a minimal role in the extent of response.
"Certain drugs are especially beneficial for patients with heart or kidney disease," said Sehgal. "Picking drugs based solely on race means we will deny these benefits to some patients. Instead, physicians should pick a drug based on multiple factors including how well a drug lowers blood pressure in an i
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Contact: George Stamatis
George.Stamatis@case.edu
216-368-3635
Case Western Reserve University
26-Feb-2004