African
American men have fewer, less severe coronary obstructions than
white malesNewswise —
While African American men are more likely to die from
cardiovascular disease, they paradoxically have fewer cases of
coronary obstruction than clinically similar white men, according to
a new national study led by a Medical College of Wisconsin
researcher. The study results, to appear in the May 16 issue of the
Journal of the American College of Cardiology, will be
presented on April 27 at the American Medical Association’s science
news briefing in New York.
“Our findings suggest the need for
greater understanding of factors influencing coronary events in
diverse populations,” says Jeffrey Whittle, M.D., MPH, associate
professor of medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin in
Milwaukee, and lead author of the study. “Overall, I believe that as
we better understand the mechanism of disease, we’ll see that
different factors are important for different individuals.” Dr.
Whittle practices at the VA Medical Center in Milwaukee.
Five U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs Medical Centers participated in the study. The researchers
compared the coronary anatomy between 311 African American and white
veterans who had coronary angiography following a positive nuclear
perfusion imaging study. This non-invasive stress test, when
positive, suggests the possibility of blocked coronary arteries. One
manifestation of coronary artery disease (CAD) is the complete or
partial obstruction of the arteries that supply blood to the heart
muscle (the coronary arteries).
Prior to an angiogram or x-ray
examination of these coronary arteries, the patient’s physician was
asked to estimate the probability of coronary obstruction. On
average the estimated likelihood of CAD in white and African
American males was similar, 83 percent vs. 79.5 percent probability,
respectively. However, when results of angiography were evaluated,
white men had more severe obstructions.
“In short, although the doctors thought the African American and
white men were equally likely to have obstructions, white men had a
greater number of severe obstructions,” Dr. Whittle says.
The results raise more questions
than they answer, points out Dr. Whittle. “They’re paradoxical. If
African American men have less severe obstructions, why are they
dying more frequently? Are nuclear imaging studies less accurate
among African American patients? Were there clinical risk factors
that we did not measure? Perhaps African Americans are less likely
to have the kind of coronary obstructions that are suitable for
revascularization.”
“Heart attacks are not usually
caused by the kind of severe obstructions that were measured in our
study. Rather, heart attacks are caused when a clot forms suddenly,
typically at the site of a less severe obstruction,” says Dr.
Whittle. He suggests that this may explain the apparent paradox.
Different individuals may differ in their propensity for developing
severe obstruction and also differ in their tendency to develop
sudden clots.
Dr. Whittle cautions that although
this study shows that whites, on average, were more likely to have
severe obstructions, many African Americans also have important
obstructions. “Differences between racial groups are much smaller
than differences among individuals within those groups.”
While research techniques and
approaches increasingly emphasize studying diverse populations, Dr.
Whittle and colleagues point out that much of modern clinical
practice is guided by studies done primarily in white men. “Previous
studies delivered conclusions that may not apply equally to everyone
in the general public. And there are many differences between
population groups which future research needs to take into account,
including access to quality health care, differences in health
habits, health status, and experiences with the health care system,”
Dr. Whittle says.
Dr. Whittle and his colleagues are
planning future studies to better understand the differences they
observed in the present study.
The principal investigator of the
study that provided the data for this paper is Nancy R. Kressin,
Ph.D., research career scientist at the Center for Health Quality,
Outcomes and Economic Research, Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial
Veterans Hospital in Bedford, Mass. Other co-authors also at the
Center include Professor Mark Glickman, Ph.D., and Michelle Orner,
MS; Professor Eric D. Peterson, M.D., MPH, a cardiologist at the
Durham VA Medical Center and Duke University Medical Center;
Associate Professor Laura A. Petersen, M.D., MPH, at the Houston VA;
and Marco Mazzella, M.D., formerly a cardiology fellow at the
University of Kansas.
The study was funded by the
Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Research &
Development Service.