News Release

Prevention is key to closing racial disparity gap in stroke

American Heart Association Rapid Access Journal Report

Peer-Reviewed Publication

American Heart Association

DALLAS, June 2, 2016 -- Forty-five year-old African-Americans are more likely to die of stroke than are whites, not because of differences in care, but because blacks are having more strokes, according to new research in the American Heart Association's Journal Stroke.

Few studies have examined whether the elevated stroke rate in blacks explains why there are more stroke deaths. The REasons for Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) Study investigated why blacks and U.S. Southerners are more likely to die from stroke. They found the higher number of stroke deaths is due to a greater number of strokes occurring at younger ages among blacks.

At age 45, blacks were four times more likely to die of stroke than their white counterparts in this analysis. By age 85, there was no difference in stroke death rates among blacks and whites.

"The magnitude of public health burden of the racial disparity in stroke is staggering, with an estimated 22,384 "extra" stroke events i.e., above what would be expected relative to rates in whites occurring in blacks in 2014," said George Howard, Dr.P.H., study lead author and a professor of biostatistics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health. "With a life-long cost of stroke of $104,000 for each of the events, this black-white difference in stroke costs America more than $2.3 billion annually. Obviously, efforts that would even marginally reduce this burden would pay remarkable dividends for the U.S."

He blamed racial differences in the development and control of risk factors and encouraged more aggressive prevention efforts.

"We need to do more to focus on prevention and control of risk factors before they result in a stroke. Unfortunately, most of the research resources are focused on treating stroke patients and preventing recurrent stroke."

Researchers said prevention efforts addressing risk factors like high blood pressure and diabetes that are more common in African-Americans are at the root of the problem; and to reduce the disparity in stroke we must "go further upstream" to make inroads on racial differences in the traditional and non-traditional risk factors that lead to stroke.

Researchers analyzed data on 29,681 people selected at random from across the United States. Conducted between 2003 and 2007, REGARDS used a combination of mail and telephone interviews to assess risk factors, followed by regular in-home visits to collect other biological samples and measure blood pressure, height, and waist circumference.

The pattern of stroke mortality they found in their study data mirrors national data, where the black-to-white hazard ratio for dying from a stroke is about 4.0 at age 45 but falls to just 1.0 by age 85. The researchers found that the risk of having a stroke followed a remarkably similar pattern; however, there were no black-white differences in the risk of dying once a stroke occurred.

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Co-authors are Claudia S. Moy, Ph.D.; Virginia J. Howard, Ph.D.; Leslie A. McClure, Ph.D.; Dawn O. Kleindorfer, M.D.; Brett M. Kissela, M.D.; Suzanne E. Judd, Ph.D.; Fredrick W. Unverzagt, Ph.D.; Elsayed Z. Soliman, M.D.; M. Safford, M.D.; Mary Cushman, M.D.; Matthew L. Flaherty, M.D. and Virginia G. Wadley, Ph.D. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.

The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke funded the study.

Additional Resources:

Stroke images are located in the right column of this release link http://newsroom.heart.org/news/prevention-is-key-to-closing-racial-disparity-gap-in-stroke?preview=f49415120fc2632d90b07963b1189ac0

After June 2, 2016, view the manuscript online.
African Americans, Heart Disease and Stroke
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