Abstract Background and aims Stroke disproportionately affects ethnic minority and lower socioeconomic groups. We investigated ethnic and socioeconomic inequalities and trends in pre-stroke vascular risk factor (VRF) profiles. Methods Population-based cohort study of adults with stroke (N=8, 515), stratified by ethnicity, occupation, and education. Associations between ethnicity, socioeconomic status and pre-stroke VRFs were calculated using Poisson regression. Results Mean age at stroke was 59. 6 years in Black Africans, 68. 1 in Black Caribbeans, and 71. 8 in White participants. 12. 0% of Black Africans had no pre-stroke risk factor diagnosis (White participants: 6. 3%). Black (vs White) participants and those with lower (vs higher) occupation or education had higher rates of hypertension (adjusted prevalence ratio: Black Caribbean 1. 29 95%CI: 1. 24-1. 34, Black African 1. 47 1. 40-1. 53, manual/routine occupation 1. 09 1. 05-1. 13, lower education 1. 06 1. 02-1. 11), and diabetes (Black Caribbean 2. 23 2. 04-2. 43, Black African 1. 92 1. 73-2. 13, manual/routine 1. 23 1. 13-1. 34, lower education 1. 21 1. 09-1. 37), but lower rates of atrial fibrillation (Black Caribbean 0. 57 0. 48-0. 68, Black African 0. 66 0. 54-0. 82, lower education 0. 78 0. 68-0. 91). Ethnic and socioeconomic inequalities in diabetes and hypertension widened over time but narrowed for atrial fibrillation. 36% of strokes occurred in people with at least one diagnosed, but untreated risk factor throughout the study period. Conclusions Hypertension- and diabetes-related strokes are more frequent and rising faster in ethnic minority and lower socioeconomic groups, driving incidence inequalities. Black people’s younger stroke age and higher proportion without pre-stroke VRF diagnosis warrant targeted and earlier primary prevention efforts to tackle health inequalities. Conflict of interest Eva Emmett: nothing to disclose; Camila PantojaRuiz: nothing to disclose; Amal Khanolkar: nothing to disclose; Charles Wolfe: nothing to disclose; Matthew O'Connell: nothing to disclose; Iain Marshall: nothing to disclose
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Eva Emmett
King's College London
C Pantoja-Ruiz
King's College London
E.J. Lim
King's College London
European Stroke Journal
King's College London
Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
NIHR Clinical Research Network
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Emmett et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7fcdbfa21ec5bbf08659 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/esj/aakag023.891