Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
| NCT number |
NCT00006408 |
| Other study ID # |
933 |
| Secondary ID |
R01HL065645 |
| Status |
Completed |
| Phase |
N/A
|
| First received |
October 12, 2000 |
| Last updated |
March 27, 2014 |
| Start date |
August 2000 |
| Est. completion date |
January 2006 |
Study information
| Verified date |
March 2014 |
| Source |
Duke University |
| Contact |
n/a |
| Is FDA regulated |
No |
| Health authority |
United States: Federal Government |
| Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
To investigate the relationship between life-stress factors associated with socioeconomic
conditions and hypertension.
Description:
BACKGROUND:
Increasingly, researchers are recognizing that risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) in
adulthood is rooted in the social and material life conditions of childhood, and that these
childhood conditions may predict risk for CVD above and beyond traditional adulthood
indicators of socioeconomic status (SES) such as education, occupation or income. Nowhere is
this life course perspective on CVD risk more important than in the case of African
Americans, especially the generation that "came of age" in the U.S. South in the late 1950s
and 1960s, the peak years of the modern Civil Rights Movement. While some African American
members of this age cohort were able to take advantage of the new opportunities for economic
advancement, some others were not, resulting thereafter in different life course
trajectories of exposure to social and economic hardship. The relationship between
variations in these social and economic life course trajectories, and CVD risk (specifically
hypertension) in adulthood, has not been investigated in African Americans.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The study uses the Pitt County, (NC) cohort, a community sample of African Americans
(N=1784, 66 percent female, 80 percent response rate) who were between 25-50 years of age at
baseline in 1988. Normotensives in the baseline sample were re-examined in 1993 (N=1195, 66
percent female, 85 percent response rate). In addition to measuring blood pressure,
extensive data on psychosocial, behavioral, and anthropometric characteristics were obtained
at both times. The study re-examines the original cohort in 2001; the anticipated sample
size is 1142 individuals (717 women and 425 men). Starting from age 20, respondents'
reported exposure to three domains of socioenvironmental stressors will be assessed: (1)
adverse socioeconomic conditions; (2) low levels of social integration; and (3) racial
discrimination. Taken individually, and then collectively, the greater the cumulative life
course exposure to these stressors, the greater the risk for adult hypertension is expected
to be. The primary analyses will focus on the relationship between pre-1988 exposures and
1988 blood pressure status (retrospective analyses), and the relationship between pre-1988
exposures and changes in blood pressure status between 1988 and 2001(prospective analyses).