| Literature DB >> 25432897 |
Flávio Danni Fuchs1, Renato Bandeira de Mello, Sandra Costa Fuchs.
Abstract
Recent guidelines for the diagnosis and management of hypertension reversed the historical trend to recommend lower blood pressure (BP) thresholds to diagnose hypertension in high-risk individuals, such as patients with diabetes and elderly patients. The decision to raise the BP thresholds for diagnosis of hypertension in patients with diabetes was mostly based on the findings of the ACCORD trial. Nonetheless, the results of the ACCORD trial are within the predicted benefit to prevent coronary artery disease and stroke by meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCT), particularly in regard to the prevention of stroke. The Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC 8) did not address prehypertension. There are many RCT done in individuals with prehypertension and concomitant cardiovascular disease showing the benefit of treatment of these patients. Trials exploring the efficacy of interventions to prevent cardiovascular disease in individuals with prehypertension free of cardiovascular disease would be hardly feasible in face of the low absolute risk of these individuals. Considering the risks of prehypertension for cardiovascular disease and the fast progression to hypertension of a large proportion of individuals with prehypertension, it is worth to consider drug treatment for individuals with prehypertension. RCT showed that the progression to hypertension can be partially halted by BP-lowering agents. These and ongoing clinical trials are herein revised. Prehypertension may be a window of opportunity to prevent hypertension and its cardiovascular consequences.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25432897 PMCID: PMC4247475 DOI: 10.1007/s11906-014-0505-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Hypertens Rep ISSN: 1522-6417 Impact factor: 5.369
Fig. 1Relative risk for coronary heart disease and stroke in blood pressure difference trials, in epidemiological studies, and in the ACCORD trial. Reproduced, with permission, from reference [9]
Clinical trials showing the effectiveness of blood pressure-lowering drugs in the prevention of cardiovascular events in patients with normal blood pressure
| Clinical condition | Studies [reference] | Active treatment | Primary outcome | RRR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diabetes mellitusa | MICRO-HOPE [ | Ramipril | MI, stroke, or CV death | 25 % (12 to 36) |
| Any evidence of atherosclerosis in the coronary, cerebral, or peripheral territories | HOPE [ | Ramipril | MI, stroke, or CV death | 22 % (14 to 30)b |
| EUROPA [ | Perindopril | MI, CV death, or cardiac arrest | 20 % (9 to 29)b | |
| Recovered from stroke | PROGRESS [ | Indapamide plus perindopril | Stroke | 42 % (19 to 58) |
| Asymptomatic heart failure | SOLVED [ | Enalapril | CV deaths | 12 % (−3 to 26) |
| Overt heart failure | SOLVED [ | Enalapril | CV deaths | 18 % (6 to 28) |
| SAVE [ | Captopril | 21 % (5 to 35) | ||
| Class IV heart failure | CONSENSUS [ | Enalapril | Total mortality | 40 % ( |
RRR relative risk reduction, MI myocardial infarction, CV cardiovascular
aIn individuals at least 55 years old with another major cardiovascular risk factor (elevated cholesterol levels, low HDL cholesterol, cigarette smoking, or microalbuminuria)
bEstimate for the entire cohort, not significantly different between normotensive and hypertensive individuals
Fig. 2Relative risks for coronary events and stroke in patients stratified by blood pressure at the beginning of randomized controlled clinical trials. Reproduced, with permission, from reference [9]