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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich). 2020 Aug 20;22(9):1554–1562. doi: 10.1111/jch.13975

Table 2.

Statistically significant associations between characteristics from Table 1 and baseline systolic blood pressure (SBP) in 1000 People with HIV and HIV-uninfected participants in Mwanza city, Tanzania

Univariate analysis Multivariate analysis
Coefficient [95%CI]
SBP in mmHg
p-value Interaction* p-value Coefficient [95%CI]
SBP in mmHg
p-value
HIV infection −8.66 [−10.72,−6.59] <0.001 N/A −6.29 [−8.29,−4.28] N/A
Age (years) 0.54 [0.44,0.64] <0.001 0.059 0.48 [0.38,0.57] <0.001
Sex (male) 5.35 [3.11,7.61] <0.001 0.420 5.54 [3.23,7.85] <0.001
Fruit servings/week −0.49 [−0.82,−0.15] 0.004 0.854 −0.37 [−0.67,−0.08] 0.014
Waist circumference (cm) 0.47 [0.38,0.56] <0.001 0.318
Body Mass Index (kg/m2) 0.85 [0.64,1.05] <0.001 0.459 0.67 [0.46,0.87] <0.001
Hemoglobin (g/dL) 2.09 [1.64,2.53] <0.001 0.046 1.06 [0.57,1.54] <0.001
eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73m2 6.91 [3.46,10.35] <0.001 0.008
CD4+ T-cell count (cells/mm3) 0.008 [0.005,0.011] <0.001 0.005
Manual labor 3.88 [1.50,6.26] 0.001 0.899
Time of home smoke exposure (years) 0.11 [0.03,0.19] 0.006 0.203