Background: Plasma activities of alkaline phosphatase, alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase, and γ-glutamyl transferase (GGT) are often increased in cardiometabolic diseases. We investigated if hypertension is associated with increased activities of these plasma markers.
Methods: We included 235 hypertensive and 708 normotensive subjects (mean age 47.3±9.6 and 58.0±10.2 years respectively) from the Hong Kong Cardiovascular Risk Factor Prevalence Study-2 (CRISPS-2) in 2000-2004 who had drank <1/week. In the follow-up study in 2005-2008 (CRISPS-3), 126 out of the 708 subjects had developed hypertension.
Results: Raised plasma ALT (OR=1.22 per SD of log-transformed level, P=0.045) and GGT (OR=1.38 per SD of log-transformed level, P=0.001) levels were associated with hypertension at baseline in CRISPS-2 after adjusting for covariates. Among subjects not on anti-hypertensive medications, plasma ALP, ALT and GGT were related to blood pressure (P<0.01). In subjects normotensive at CRISPS-2, plasma GGT, but not ALP, ALT and AST, was an independent predictor of new-onset hypertension at CRISPS-3 (OR=1.38 per SD of log-transformed level, P=0.020 and OR=2.68 for 3rd tertile vs. 1st tertile, P=0.004) after adjusting for covariates.
Conclusions: Among the 4 plasma markers, increased GGT activity is the strongest predictor for existing and new-onset hypertension in Hong Kong Chinese.
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