Introduction
Hypertension is a global health challenge increasingly responsible for most deaths worldwide. According to the Global Disease Burden survey [
1], cardiovascular diseases (CVD) account for nearly 17 million deaths annually, of which more than 50% are due to hypertension related complications.
In its effort to tackle the rising burden of hypertension globally, the World Health Organisation recommends increase in physical activity, avoidance of unhealthy diet, reduction in salt intake and abstinence from tobacco use and harmful intake of alcohol [
2]. Despite adopting these recommendations at population and individual levels, the burden of hypertension and other CVDs remains inadequately addressed, thus underscoring the need to explore other risk factors such as homocysteine.
Homocysteine is an intermediary metabolite of methionine whose amount in excess of 10 µmol/L (otherwise known as hyperhomocysteinemia) increases the risk of CVD in people with hypertension [
3]. Compelling evidence from large-scale observational [
4] and longitudinal studies [
5] indicate that the risk of stroke in subjects suffering from hypertension accompanied by HHcy is higher compared to those with neither/either of the two conditions. Epidemiological data from United States of America, China and Europe indicate that among hypertensive subjects, prevalence of HHcy is 39%, 75%, and 19% respectively. Although the role of homocysteine is well-established in the development of vascular diseases [
6,
7], efforts to use it as a therapeutic target of hypertension or CVD has suffered major setbacks [
8,
9]. Hypothesis stimulated by recent evidence [
10] indicates that the therapeutic benefit of homocysteine lowering may be affected by its interaction with other risk factors for hypertension or CVD, hence may vary from population to population. In Nigeria, 38% of its adult population are hypertensive, of whom control of blood pressure is achieved only in 12% [
11] and knowledge of the burden of hyperhomocysteinemia is uncertain. The present study was aimed at evaluating the burden of hyperhomocysteinemia among adult Nigerians and also to assess the relation of homocysteine with hypertension and established risk factors for CVD.
Discussion
The main finding of this study was that hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy) occurred in nearly one-eight of the overall subjects and one-quarter of the hypertensive subjects. Homocysteine (Hcy) independently associated with age, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
Due to the use of different cut-offs for HHcy in different studies, it is difficult to discuss our findings in the light of those of other studies. Our decision to use the 10 µmol/L threshold was driven by expert opinions [
19] which suggest that commencement of Hcy reduction at this level is more beneficial than at higher levels. Previous studies of HHcy among hypertensive Nigerians were hospital-based and were done using a threshold of 15 µmol/L [
14,
20]. The prevalence of HHcy among hypertensive subjects in the current study (23.6%) was strikingly lower than the 56.0% [
20] and 98.3% [
14] reported by the previous studies. Although the cause of this wide difference is unknown, we hypothesise that difference in study participants may be a plausible explanation bearing that subjects of the current study were drawn from an apparently healthy semi-urban general population with a socio-economic status that could afford them a vitamin-rich diet well known to protect against HHcy. This hypothesis is based on evidences from large scale observational studies [
21,
22] which have shown that due to limited financial resources, rural compared to urban dwellers tend to prioritise high-caloric foods over fruits and vegetables given that the former is relatively cheaper. The influence of vitamin-deficient diet on plasma Hcy, possibly explained by low socio-economic status, may also be observed in other surveys involving rural-dwelling Chinese subjects which recorded HHcy in more than 75% of the hypertensive cohorts [
23,
24]. Chang and colleagues reported that among 3392 low-income hypertensive subjects who resided in a rural area of North-Eastern China, more than 85% had HHcy and an average diet score of 2.2 which is suggestive of a diet pattern low in vegetables. Vitamin B6, B12 and folic acid are essential requirements of Hcy metabolism which when deficient, precipitates an elevation in plasma Hcy. Other reports across the globe have shown that among hypertensive populations, HHcy occurs 39.4% in the United States of America (USA) [
5] and 18.7% in Europe [
25]. In addition to diet, other factors directly influencing plasma Hcy concentration are enzymes responsible for Hcy metabolism such as methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) [
26] and cystathionine beta synthase (CBS) [
27] whose defective or variant forms could be involved in geographical/racial phenotypic variation of HHcy. In the Hordaland homocysteine study including over 18,000 adult Norwegians aged at least 40 years, low folate status accompanied by Hcy > 40 µmol/L and attributable to the MTHFR 677C > T polymorphism was prevalent in over 78% of the study participants [
28]. In some parts of North America such as Canada, the MTHFR 677C > T polymorphism accounts for elevated Hcy in almost 40% of Franco-Canadians and ranges between 5 and 15% of the general Canadian population [
29].
The relation of Hcy with lipid fractions remains largely inconsistent across various observational and experimental studies [
27,
30,
31]. Nevertheless, our findings were in concordance with some earlier reports. Evidence from a cross-sectional survey of 4,660 Chinese subjects in Shijingshan district of Beijing [
31], showed that increasing Hcy was associated with an increased risk of low HDL-C (AOR = 1.41, 95% CI 1.14–1.73) and hypertriglyceridemia (AOR = 1.29, 95% CI 1.10–1.52). In 300 Indian patients with coronary heart disease, Mahalle and colleagues [
32] reported that Hcy was directly proportional to TAG and VLDL but inversely proportional to HDL-C. Experimental studies involving the use of double knock-out mice model (CBS−/−/apo-E−/−) with reduced CBS activity showed lower HDL-C (19.9md/dl vs. 24.4 mg/dl) and higher Hcy (210 µM vs. 3.8 µM) when compared with single knock-out (CBS + / + /apo-E−/−) [
27]. The mechanism underlying the unfavourable association of Hcy with lipid fractions involves various transcription factors and enzymes of lipid metabolism including peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα), lecithin-cholesterol acyl transferase (LCAT) and sterol regulatory element binding proteins (SREBPs). Hcy interrupts the transcriptional activities of PPARα, thereby down regulating the production of apo-AI which is an indispensable component of HDL-C production and biological activity [
33]. It is also most probable Hcy interruption/disruption plays some significant roles in the co-regulation of some downstream retrotransposons such as transposable elements (TEs), repetitive sequences in mammalian genomes, which have been implicated in many of the same conditions for which PPARα agonists are therapeutic including neuro-degeneration, schizophrenia, and drug addiction. Furthermore, Hcy also interferes with HDL-C production by inhibiting the activity of LCAT [
34,
35] which is essential for reverse cholesterol transport. Conversely, Hcy enhances the expression of SREBPs, a membrane bound transcriptional factor of the endoplasmic reticulum which encodes enzymes of cholesterol/TAG metabolism and uptake [
36]. These biochemical mechanisms explaining the interaction between Hcy and lipid metabolism are consistent with the results of this study.
Though there are mixed views concerning the link between Hcy and blood pressure [
10,
28,
37‐
39], various mechanisms in support of a positive association have been put forward [
6,
40,
41]. Under conditions of HHcy, uptake and synthesis of cysteine (an essential precursor of gluthathione) is reduced and antioxidant potential compromised thus leading to oxidative stress [
42]. Additionally, Hcy is also metabolised into Hcy-thiolactone, a reactive specie which when bound to collagen, inhibits its activity [
7]. The resultant effect of these is endothelial damage, endothelium-myocyte uncoupling, hindered passage of nitric oxide through the matrix barrier, poor vasodilation, diastolic dysfunction and high blood pressure [
6,
40]. Other possible mechanisms include increased arterial stiffness, increased arteriolar constriction, increased sodium reabsorption, poor elastic vascular wall and smooth cell proliferation [
6]. In a case-controlled study involving 2,615 Chinese subjects, Yang and colleagues [
10] observed a strong positive correlation between Hcy and blood pressure (
P < 0.05). Similarly, report from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) including 7,612 residents of USA aged 17 and above, showed that after adjusting for CVD risk factors, a 5 µmol/L increase in Hcy was associated with a 0.7 mmHg and 0.5 mmHg increase in systolic and diastolic BP in men and a 1.2 mmHg and 0.7 mmHg increase in systolic and diastolic BP in women [
43]. Contrary to these, the Framingham Heart Survey, documented that after a median follow up of 2,104 subjects for 4 years, the age and sex-adjusted odds of hypertension incidence due to Hcy was negative and non-significant [
38].
Positive association of Hcy with age or alcohol intake have been widely reported [
14,
28,
31]. Though the mechanism underlying this association is vague, it is hypothesized that deficiency in folate and vitamin B12; metabolic changes, poor nutritional absorption and organ function associated with ageing or alcohol intake are possible causes of this anomaly [
44‐
46].
In conclusion, HHcy occurs among adult Nigerians living with hypertension. Hcy associates independently with age, HDL-C, office systolic and diastolic BP. The inverse association of Hcy with HDL-C is clinically relevant considering the vital role that HDL-C plays to prevent against vascular diseases. In addition to this, HDL-C is understood to be crucially involved in the hydrolytic activity of paraoxonase-1 which leads to breakdown of Hcy-thiolactone (the Hcy derivative that is directly responsible for collagen damage) [
47].
Our findings support the need for future research to conduct a pre-assessment of study population with a view to discovering the presence of interactive effects of Hcy and conventional risk factors on hypertension or CVD. This exercise is important as it is hypothesised that the presence of interactive effects of Hcy and other factors may exacerbate the association of Hcy with blood pressure, thus affecting how different populations respond to Hcy-lowering therapy.
Despite conflicting evidence regarding the CVD benefit of lowering plasma Hcy, which has hindered global adoption of Hcy guidelines in CVD care, routine assessment of Hcy in hypertensive subjects is necessary as emerging evidence [
48] indicate that Hcy attenuates the efficacy of certain antihypertensive medications like angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. The therapeutic benefit of lowering Hcy remains a prospect if the PPARα-induced deregulation of apo-AI can be exploited because animal-based evidence indicates that certain PPARα agonists such as ciprofibrate improve endothelial function in mice with HHcy [
49].
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