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Joint association of urinary sodium and potassium excretion with cardiovascular events and mortality : Prospective cohort study

Authors :
Scott A. Lear
Jephat Chifamba
John Ferguson
Andrew Mente
Martin O'Donnell
Noor Hassim Ismail
Annika Rosengren
Rasha Khatib
Lu Yin
Andrzej Szuba
Patricio Lopez-Jaramillo
Xiaoyun Liu
Sumathi Swaminathan
Khalid F. AlHabib
Khalid Yusoff
Sumathy Rangarajan
Noushin Mohammadifard
Atyekin Oguz
Rita Yusuf
Gilles R. Dagenais
Alvaro Avezum
Andreas Wielgosz
Koon K. Teo
Iolanthé M. Kruger
Salim Yusuf
Neil O'Leary
Matthew J. McQueen
Romaina Iqbal
Rafael Diaz
Antonio L. Dans
Fernando Lanas
Karen Yeates
Afzalhussein Yusufali
Andrew Smyth
12079642 - Kruger, Iolanthé Marike
Source :
BMJ, The BMJ, Repositorio Universidad de Santander, Universidad de Santander, instacron:Universidad de Santander
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMJ (Online), 2019, 2019.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate the joint association of sodium and potassium urinary excretion (as surrogate measures of intake) with cardiovascular events and mortality, in the context of current World Health Organization recommendations for daily intake (3.5 g potassium) in adults.DesignInternational prospective cohort study.Setting18 high, middle, and low income countries, sampled from urban and rural communities.Participants103 570 people who provided morning fasting urine samples.Main outcome measuresAssociation of estimated 24 hour urinary sodium and potassium excretion (surrogates for intake) with all cause mortality and major cardiovascular events, using multivariable Cox regression. A six category variable for joint sodium and potassium was generated: sodium excretion (low (5 g/day) sodium intakes) by potassium excretion (greater/equal or less than median 2.1 g/day).ResultsMean estimated sodium and potassium urinary excretion were 4.93 g/day and 2.12 g/day, respectively. After a median follow-up of 8.2 years, 7884 (6.1%) participants had died or experienced a major cardiovascular event. Increasing urinary sodium excretion was positively associated with increasing potassium excretion (unadjusted r=0.34), and only 0.002% had a concomitant urinary excretion of 3.5 g/day of potassium. A J-shaped association was observed of sodium excretion and inverse association of potassium excretion with death and cardiovascular events. For joint sodium and potassium excretion categories, the lowest risk of death and cardiovascular events occurred in the group with moderate sodium excretion (3-5 g/day) and higher potassium excretion (21.9% of cohort). Compared with this reference group, the combinations of low potassium with low sodium excretion (hazard ratio 1.23, 1.11 to 1.37; 7.4% of cohort) and low potassium with high sodium excretion (1.21, 1.11 to 1.32; 13.8% of cohort) were associated with the highest risk, followed by low sodium excretion (1.19, 1.02 to 1.38; 3.3% of cohort) and high sodium excretion (1.10, 1.02 to 1.18; 29.6% of cohort) among those with potassium excretion greater than the median. Higher potassium excretion attenuated the increased cardiovascular risk associated with high sodium excretion (P for interaction=0.007).ConclusionsThese findings suggest that the simultaneous target of low sodium intake (3.5 g/day) is extremely uncommon. Combined moderate sodium intake (3-5 g/day) with high potassium intake is associated with the lowest risk of mortality and cardiovascular events.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ, The BMJ, Repositorio Universidad de Santander, Universidad de Santander, instacron:Universidad de Santander
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....736d27f33c2dd2f2039e70450abfce25