| Literature DB >> 32281319 |
Jinho Shin1, Myeong Chan Cho2.
Abstract
Leaving behind substantial reflections or skepticisms on the shortage of evidences about blood pressure (BP) thresholds for antihypertensive drug therapy and target BPs, major hypertensive guidelines including Korean hypertension guidelines were recently updated for earlier and more intensive control of BP. Because hypertension is one of the major risk factors for death, stroke, cardiovascular (CV) disease, heart failure, and cognitive impairment, substantial improvement of hypertension management is necessary to reduce disease and socioeconomic burdens and to promote CV health. Theoretically, earlier intervention in terms of age and BP level and thorough control of BP into within normal range would prevent or delay major adverse CV events. Revised hypertension guidelines were developed by the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association, Korean Society of Hypertension, European Society of Cardiology/European Society of Hypertension, and Japanese Society of Hypertension in order. In this article, recent updates and clinical significances of the Korean hypertension guidelines will be discussed with comparison of foreign hypertension guidelines and considerable changes in the management of hypertension will be introduced for cardiologists and general practitioners.Entities:
Keywords: Antihypertensive agents; Hypertension; Practice guideline; Risk factors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32281319 PMCID: PMC7234851 DOI: 10.4070/kcj.2019.0338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean Circ J ISSN: 1738-5520 Impact factor: 3.243
Figure 1Trends of hypertension management in Korea.
Level of hypertension management in Korea improved rapidly since 1998 over a decade but it has been stagnant over another decade since 2007. Data are presented as age-standardized proportion for the adults aged 30 or higher in Korean National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey.
Classification of office BP and definitions of hypertension in adults
| SBP | DBP | KSH 2018 | ACC/AHA 2017 | ESC/ESH 2018 | JSH 2019 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <120 | and | <80 | Normal* | Normal | Optimal | Normal |
| 120–129 | and | <80 | Elevated | Elevated | Normal† | High normal |
| 130–139 | and/or | 80–89 | Prehypertension | Stage 1 | High normal‡ | Elevated |
| 140–159 | and/or | 90–99 | Grade I | Stage 2 | Grade 1 | Grade I |
| 160–179 | and/or | 100–109 | Grade II | Stage 2 | Grade 2 | Grade II |
| ≥180 | and/or | ≥110 | Grade II | Stage 2 | Grade 3 | Grade III |
BP category is defined according to seated clinic BP and by the highest level of BP, whether systolic or diastolic.
ACC = American College of Cardiology; AHA = American Heart Association; BP = blood pressure; DBP = diastolic blood pressure; ESC = European Society of Cardiology; ESH = European Society of Hypertension; JSH = Japanese Society of Hypertension; KSH = Korean Society of Hypertension; SBP = systolic blood pressure.
*BP threshold with minimal risk for cardiovascular events; †Normal BP category is defines as SBP 120–129 mmHg and/or DBP 80–84mmHg; ‡High normal BP category is defines as SBP 130–139 mmHg and/or DBP 85–89 mmHg.
Figure 2Clinical algorithm to achieve target BP according to the presence of complicated diseases or patient risk profiles. In complicated patients, one or more antihypertensive medications are already initiated regardless of level of BP according to the standard treatment guidelines so that further titration can be decided by recommended target BP.
BP = blood pressure; CKD = chronic kidney disease; CVD = cardiovascular disease; DM = diabetes mellitus.
*BP lowering drug treatment and lifestyle modifications are recommended for frail elderly patients or very old patients (≥80 years) when SBP is ≥160 mmHg.
Comparison of office BP targets in major hypertension guidelines
| Category | KSH 2018 | ACC/AHA 2017 | ESC/ESH 2018 | JSH 2019 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General population | <140/90 | <130/80 | <130/80 | <130/80 | |
| Elderly (≥65 years of age)* | <140/90 | <130 (SBP) | <140/80 | <140/90 (≥75 years) | |
| Diabetes mellitus | <140/85 | <130/80 | <130/80 | <130/80 | |
| Chronic kidney disease | Proteinuria (−) | <140/90 | <130/80 | <140/80 | <140/90§ |
| Proteinuria (+) | <130/80 | <130/80 | |||
| Cardiovascular disease | Coronary artery disease | <130/80 | <130/80 | <130/80 | <130/80 |
| Heart failure | <130/80 | <130/80 | <130/80† | <130 (SBP) | |
| Cerebrovascular disease‡ | Stroke/TIA | <140/90 | <130/80 | <130/80 | <130/80 |
| Lacunar | <130/80 | ||||
ACC = American College of Cardiology; AHA = American Heart Association; BP = blood pressure; ESC = European Society of Cardiology; ESH = European Society of Hypertension; JSH = Japanese Society of Hypertension; KSH = Korean Society of Hypertension; SBP = systolic blood pressure; TIA = transient ischemic attack.
*Office BP thresholds for treatment in very old patients (≥80 years) or frail elderly hypertensives when BP is ≥160/90 mmHg in both KSH and ESH guidelines, whereas BP level to initiate treatment is SBP ≥130 and ≥140/90 mmHg in ACC/AHA and JSH guidelines, respectively; †Outcome for patients with heart failure is poor if BP values are low, which suggests that it may be wise to avoid actively lowering BP to <120/70 mmHg, especially in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; ‡Recommended BP goals for the secondary stroke prevention. ESH guideline suggests an SBP target range of 120–130 mmHg should be considered in all hypertensive patients with ischemic stroke or TIA; §JSH guideline recommends a target BP <140/90mmHg in patients with cerebrovascular disease in whom bilateral carotid artery stenosis and/or cerebral main artery occlusion is present or has not yet been evaluated.