@article{22928, keywords = {Female, Humans, Aged, Follow-Up Studies, Male, Risk Factors, Hypertension, China, Incidence, Risk Assessment, Stroke, Time Factors, Blood Pressure, potassium, Retrospective Studies, Diet, Sodium-Restricted}, author = {Tian M and Wu Yangfeng and Li Nicole and Elliott Paul and Huang Liping and Yin Xuejun and Hao Zhixin and Stepien Sandrine and Shi Jingpu and Feng Xiangxian and Zhang Jianxin and Zhang Yuhong and Zhang Ruijuan and Yan Lijing and Labarthe Darwin and Neal Bruce}, title = {Rationale, design, and baseline characteristics of the Salt Substitute and Stroke Study (SSaSS)-A large-scale cluster randomized controlled trial.}, abstract = {
Lowering sodium intake with a reduced-sodium, added potassium salt substitute has been proved to lower blood pressure levels. Whether the same strategy will also reduce the risks of vascular outcomes is uncertain and controversial. The SSaSS has been designed to test whether sodium reduction achieved with a salt substitute can reduce the risk of vascular disease. The study is a large-scale, open, cluster-randomized controlled trial done in 600 villages across 5 provinces in China. Participants have either a history of stroke or an elevated risk of stroke based on age and blood pressure level at entry. Villages were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to intervention or continued usual care. Salt substitute is provided free of charge to participants in villages assigned to the intervention group. Follow-up is scheduled every 6months for 5years, and all potential endpoints are reviewed by a masked adjudication committee. The primary end point is fatal and nonfatal stroke, and the 2 secondary endpoints are total major cardiovascular events and total mortality. The study has been designed to provide 90% statistical power (with 2-sided α = .05) to detect a 13% or greater relative risk reduction for stroke. The power estimate assumes a primary outcome event rate of 3.5% per year and a systolic blood pressure difference of 3.0mm Hg between randomized groups. Recruitment is complete and there are 20,996 participants (about 35 per village) that have been enrolled. Mean age is 65years and 49% are female. There were 73% enrolled on the basis of a history of stroke. The trial is well placed to describe the effects of salt substitution on the risks of vascular disease and death and will provide important policy-relevant data.
}, year = {2017}, journal = {Am Heart J}, volume = {188}, pages = {109-117}, issn = {1097-6744}, doi = {10.1016/j.ahj.2017.02.033}, language = {eng}, }