| Literature DB >> 28427345 |
Sven Streit1, Marjolein Verschoor1, Nicolas Rodondi1,2, Daiana Bonfim3, Robert A Burman4, Claire Collins5, Gerasimovska Kitanovska Biljana6, Sandra Gintere7, Raquel Gómez Bravo8, Kathryn Hoffmann9, Claudia Iftode10, Kasper L Johansen11, Ngaire Kerse12, Tuomas H Koskela13, Sanda Kreitmayer Peštić14, Donata Kurpas15, Christian D Mallen16, Hubert Maisoneuve17, Christoph Merlo18, Yolanda Mueller19, Christiane Muth20, Marija Petek Šter21, Ferdinando Petrazzuoli22,23, Thomas Rosemann24, Martin Sattler25, Zuzana Švadlenková26, Athina Tatsioni27, Hans Thulesius28, Victoria Tkachenko29, Peter Torzsa30, Rosy Tsopra31,32, Tuz Canan33, Rita P A Viegas34, Shlomo Vinker35, Margot W M de Waal36, Andreas Zeller37, Jacobijn Gussekloo36, Rosalinde K E Poortvliet38.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In oldest-old patients (>80), few trials showed efficacy of treating hypertension and they included mostly the healthiest elderly. The resulting lack of knowledge has led to inconsistent guidelines, mainly based on systolic blood pressure (SBP), cardiovascular disease (CVD) but not on frailty despite the high prevalence in oldest-old. This may lead to variation how General Practitioners (GPs) treat hypertension. Our aim was to investigate treatment variation of GPs in oldest-olds across countries and to identify the role of frailty in that decision.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical variation; Elderly; Frailty; General practitioners; Hypertension; Oldest-old
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28427345 PMCID: PMC5399328 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-017-0486-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Baseline characteristics of participating GPs from 29 countries
| Baseline characteristics ( |
|
|---|---|
| Female GP | 1341 (52.3) |
| Practice location | |
| City | 1292 (50.8) |
| Suburban | 599 (23.6) |
| Rural | 651 (25.6) |
| Experience as GP | |
| < 5 years | 471 (18.5) |
| 5–10 years | 445 (17.5) |
| 11–15 years | 341 (13.4) |
| 16–20 years | 328 (12.9) |
| > 20 years | 956 (37.6) |
| Self-estimated prevalence of patients >80 years at own practice | |
| < 10% | 851 (38.7) |
| 10–20% | 865 (39.4) |
| 21–30% | 323 (14.7) |
| > 30% | 159 (7.2) |
Fig. 1National percentages in which general practitioners decide to start antihypertensive treatment in all eight cases of oldest-old patients (unadjusted)
Fig. 2Influence of frailty on 2053 general practitioners (GPs) when deciding to start antihypertensive treatment per country (adjusteda). aAdjusted for GP characteristics (gender, experience, location, prevalence of oldest-old, guideline compliance) and patient characteristics (cardiovascular disease, systolic blood pressure). A mixed-effects model was used to account for multiple assessments per GP. Although 2543 GPs participated, missing data on GPs’ decisions to treat the eight cases means that only 2053 GPs are included here
Percentages of general practitioners (GPs) starting antihypertensive treatment for the eight individual cases (n = 2053 GPs)
| Cases | Proportion of GPs starting treatment | Case Characteristics | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % (95% CI) | Frailty | CVD | SBP 160 mmHg | |
| Overall | 54.9 (54.1–55.7) | |||
| Case 1 | 17.3 (15.7–19.0) | − | − | − |
| Case 2 | 18.2 (16.6–20.0) | + | − | − |
| Case 3 | 85.4 (83.7–86.9) | − | − | + |
| Case 4 | 75.6 (73.6–77.5) | + | − | + |
| Case 5 | 96.8 (95.9–97.5) | − | + | + |
| Case 6 | 84.9 (83.2–86.4) | + | + | + |
| Case 7 | 32.5 (30.4–34.6) | − | + | − |
| Case 8 | 29.5 (27.5–31.6) | + | + | − |
CVD cardiovascular disease, SBP systolic blood pressure
Although 2543 GPs participated, missing data on GPs’ decisions to treat the eight cases means that only 2053 GPs are included here