The promise of genomic medicine to transform healthcare and improve health will not be fully realized until discoveries become relevant to and available for use by diverse populations and their clinicians. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with hypertension. People with African ancestry (AAs) have the highest risk of CKD and kidney failure, the highest prevalence of hypertension, and the lowest rate of blood pressure (BP) control. While this disparity is in part due to social determinants, ancestry has biological underpinnings and APOL1 high-risk genetic variants, nearly exclusive in AAs, increase kidney failure risk 10-fold. As part of the IGNITE II network, we will continue to conduct the prospective randomized pragmatic genotype-guided clinical trial, GUARDD-US, to determine the impact of implementing APOL1 and antihypertensive pharmacogenomic testing on hypertension control. The trial will determine the effect of early vs. delayed knowledge of a positive APOL1 genotyping result on 3-month systolic blood pressure (SBP). The trial aims to recruit African Americans with hypertension, with or without CKD, randomized to immediate versus delayed return of APOL1 genetic testing. In those who are APOL1 negative, we will also conduct a pilot study to test the impact of pharmacogenetic (PGx) testing on SBP. Secondary outcomes include 6-month SBP, in CKD patients, on medications ordered, renal diagnosis and testing patient psycho-behavioral outcomes, cost effectiveness, and the effect of PGX guided hypertension management on SBP. We expect the successful results from this clinical trial will provide critical evidence needed to drive the implementation of genomic medicine across broad demographics of patient populations.