Objective: Reports of higher mortality in African Americans have often focused on socioeconomic differences. Such differences do not explain the excess mortality in African Americans compared with Hispanics in Los Angeles County. We suggest the existence of genetic factors to explain at least some of the differences in mortality risk.
Methods: We compared the mortality rates from circulatory diseases in African American and Hispanic adults of Los Angeles County for 1988 to 1992 with the frequency of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) genotype.
Results: African American adults 45 to 74 years old had a 2-fold higher overall mortality rate than Hispanics. The largest differences were seen for hypertensive disease and cardiomyopathy in men; the most striking differences were seen in the youngest age group. Rates were lower in women than in men, but African American women also showed substantial excess compared with Hispanics. ACE genotype also showed a significant difference between the Hispanic and African American population; the latter had a significantly higher prevalence of the DD genotype, which is associated with a higher level of circulating enzyme, and lower prevalence of the II genotype, which is associated with a lower enzyme level.
Conclusion: African American adults aged 45 to 74 years in Los Angeles County have a substantial excess mortality from hypertensive diseases compared with a similar Hispanic population. The frequency of the ACE DD genotype was higher in African Americans than in Hispanics. These studies may indirectly support the possibility of a genetic contribution to the excess hypertensive disease mortality in African Americans.