| Literature DB >> 32975166 |
Jinming Fu1, Yupeng Liu1, Lei Zhang1, Lu Zhou1, Dapeng Li1, Hude Quan2, Lin Zhu1, Fulan Hu1, Xia Li1, Shuhan Meng1, Ran Yan1, Suhua Zhao1, Justina Ucheojor Onwuka1, Baofeng Yang3, Dianjun Sun4, Yashuang Zhao1.
Abstract
Background Nonpharmacologic interventions that modify lifestyle can lower blood pressure (BP) and have been assessed in numerous randomized controlled trials and pairwise meta-analyses. It is still unclear which intervention would be most efficacious. Methods and Results Bayesian network meta-analyses were performed to estimate the comparative effectiveness of different interventions for lowering BP. From 60 166 potentially relevant articles, 120 eligible articles (14 923 participants) with a median follow-up of 12 weeks, assessing 22 nonpharmacologic interventions, were included. According to the surface under the cumulative ranking probabilities and Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) quality of evidence, for adults with prehypertension to established hypertension, high-quality evidence indicated that the Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension (DASH) was superior to usual care and all other nonpharmacologic interventions in lowering systolic BP (weighted mean difference, 6.97 mm Hg; 95% credible interval, 4.50-9.47) and diastolic BP (weighted mean difference, 3.54 mm Hg; 95% credible interval, 1.80-5.28). Compared with usual care, moderate- to high-quality evidence indicated that aerobic exercise, isometric training, low-sodium and high-potassium salt, comprehensive lifestyle modification, breathing-control, and meditation could lower systolic BP and diastolic BP. For patients with hypertension, moderate- to high-quality evidence suggested that the interventions listed (except comprehensive lifestyle modification) were associated with greater systolic BP and diastolic BP reduction than usual care; salt restriction was also effective in lowering both systolic BP and diastolic BP. Among overweight and obese participants, low-calorie diet and low-calorie diet plus exercise could lower more BP than exercise. Conclusions DASH might be the most effective intervention in lowering BP for adults with prehypertension to established hypertension. Aerobic exercise, isometric training, low-sodium and high-potassium salt, comprehensive lifestyle modification, salt restriction, breathing-control, meditation and low-calorie diet also have obvious effects on BP reduction.Entities:
Keywords: hypertension; network meta‐analysis; nonpharmacologic interventions; randomized controlled trial; systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32975166 PMCID: PMC7792371 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.120.016804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart of the study selection for the network meta‐analysis.
*In case of multiple publications from the same population, only the study with the largest sample size was included. For studies published more than once, only the study with the most informative and complete data was included. Any additional publications were excluded to avoid double counting data from the same trial. PRISMA indicates Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐analyses.
Coding Guide for Components of Nonpharmacologic Interventions
| Intervention/Abbreviation | Brief Descriptions | Median Intensity |
|---|---|---|
| Dietary approach | ||
| DASH | Participants' diet strictly follows the DASH eating pattern, which recommends a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low‐fat dairy with reduced sodium and saturated and total fat content | Eating on the DASH pattern every day |
| Low‐sodium and high‐potassium salt | Participants receive either a salt substitute (25%−30% potassium chloride, 50%−65% sodium chloride, and 5%–10% calcium and magnesium sulfate) to cover all cooking, or test food cooked using salt substitution | 5 g of low‐sodium and high‐potassium salt every day |
| Salt restriction | The goal is to restrict daily sodium intake <100 mmol (5.85 g salt). Professional instructors give participants detailed advice about how to reduce their salt intake and to avoid foods that contain large amount of salt and also offer metric salt‐spoon or placebo to participants | Restrict sodium intake <100 mmol (5.85 g salt) every day |
| Physical exercise | ||
| Aerobic exercise | Participants are supervised by project staff to perform exercise (eg, treadmill or brisk walking, jogging, bicycle training, swimming, ball games), at least 30 min/time; almost all were moderate or high intensity (60%–90% of the maximum heart rate or maximum oxygen consumption) | 3 d/wk, 50 min/time |
| Isometric training | Participants perform isometric training, which involves sustained contraction against an immovable load or resistance with no or minimal change in length of the involved muscle group. Training consisted of four 2‐min isometric contractions at 30% MVC using alternate hands with a programmed handgrip dynamometer, with a 1‐min rest period between each contraction for 3 d per week | 3 d/wk, bilateral contractions at 30% of MVC |
| Resistance training | Participants perform active movement progress through muscle to overcome external resistance, such as leg press, leg curl, knee extension, chest press, seated row, overhead press, triceps dip, and biceps curl, 50–60 min/d, 2–3 d/wk | 3 d/wk |
| Tai chi | Tai chi js a set of Chinese systematic calisthenic exercises with slow circular movements and requires the muscles to remain relaxed while making sustained movement. Participants are taught by instructors with expertise to finish each session, which includes warm‐up exercises, tai chi practice, and cool‐down exercise | 3 d/wk, 50 min with 50% to 60% V |
| Qigong | Qigong, a traditional Chinese health and fitness exercise, includes | Qigong classes 2 d/wk, home practice 2 d/wk |
| Interventions to reduce stress | ||
| Breathing control | Use of a device guides participants toward slow and regular breathing in the evening (the goal is <10 breaths/min with accumulating ≥40 min of therapeutic breathing per week) | Every day, 15 min/time |
| Meditation | Transcendental meditation is considered the principal approach for stress reduction. Participants are instructed by a professional meditation instructor and then practice 20 min twice a day while sitting comfortably with eyes closed | Practice meditation 20 min twice a day |
| MBSR | MBSR is a multicomponent group intervention that provides systematic training in mindfulness meditation as a self‐regulation approach to stress reduction and emotion management. It can be explored through activities including but not limited to gentle stretching and mindful yoga, a meditative body scan, mindful breathing, and mindful walking | Practice MBSR techniques 45 min every day |
| PMR | PMR involves directing the participants' attention to tense and relax various muscle groups throughout the body systematically to achieve deep relaxation | Practice PMR techniques 15–20 min twice a day |
| Yoga | Participants are instructed by a professional yoga instructor through yoga home training or a yoga class and practice yoga at least 30 min/d, 3 d/wk | Practice yoga 3 d/wk, 45 min |
| Interventions to lose weight | ||
| Low‐calorie diet | Participants who are overweight or obese using the low‐calorie diet induce weight loss are provided with detailed guidelines on the daily number of servings from each food group and on fat intake to achieve weight loss of ≤10% of each participant's baseline body weight. To enhance compliance with the low‐calorie diet, participants are provided with food diaries that assisted them in recording intake | Low‐caloric diet every day for weight loss |
| Exercise | Participants who are overweight or obese in the exercise training group are provided with an individualized exercise prescription consisting of 30–40 min exercise (eg, aerobic exercise or others), at least 3 d/wk, keeping 60%–80% of the maximum heart rate. To enhance compliance, details of each exercise session are recorded in a training diary and reviewed by the study's counselor | Exercise 3 d/wk, reach 60%–80% peak heart rate |
| Low‐calorie diet plus exercise | Participants who are overweight or obese using the exercise training plus low‐calorie diet for weight loss are provided with detailed guidelines on a low‐calorie diet to achieve weight loss and decrease BMI. In addition, they perform systematic exercise training, 30–45 min/d, at least 3 d/wk, keeping 60%–80% of the maximum heart rate | Low‐caloric diet for losing weight, with exercise 3 d/wk, reaching 60%–80% peak heart rate |
| Restrict alcohol | ||
| Alcohol restriction | Participants reduce their alcohol consumption to <14 drinks weekly or 50% cut or total abstinence, with education for alcohol restriction provided by investigators | Reduce alcohol intake by half or abstain |
| Combined intervention | ||
| Aerobic exercise+DASH | Participants follow the DASH eating pattern and perform aerobic exercise | At least 5 d/wk, 30–60 min aerobic exercise plus DASH |
| Aerobic exercise+resistance training | Participants attend an aerobic exercise session and a resistance training session at the center at least twice a week | At least 2 d/wk, endurance training and resistance training |
| Salt restriction+DASH | Participants follow the DASH eating pattern with salt restriction (sodium intake <100 mmol/d) | Follow diet every day |
| Salt restriction+low‐calorie diet plus exercise | Participants who are overweight or obese follow a low‐sodium (80 mmol/d) diet with low‐calorie intake to achieve weight loss of 4.5 kg | Low‐sodium and low‐calorie diet every day; 3 d/wk, reach 60%–80% peak heart rate |
| Comprehensive lifestyle modification | ||
| Comprehensive lifestyle modification | Participants are recommended to comprehensively modify their lifestyle, such as lose weight, restrict sodium intake, reduce alcohol consumption, increase physical exercise to a moderate degree, give up cigarette smoking, and learn to manage stress | Use lifestyle modification every day |
| Control group | ||
| Usual care | Participants keep usual lifestyle and do not change during the period of intervention | |
Brief descriptions of 22 interventions plus usual care (as control) are summarized, with 17 nonpharmacologic interventions targeted to the general population with hypertension or prehypertension. BMI indicates body mass index; DASH, Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension; MBSR, mindfulness‐based stress reduction; MVC, maximum voluntary contraction; and PMR, progressive muscle relaxation.
Nonpharmacologic intervention targeted only people who were overweight and obese who had hypertension or prehypertension.
Nonpharmacologic intervention targeted only people who used alcohol habitually who had hypertension or prehypertension.
Details of Included Studies (N=126)
| Study Details | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Region of origin of study participants | |
| Europe | 62 (49.20) |
| America (all) | 31 (24.60) |
| Asia | 17 (13.49) |
| America (Black Americans) | 12 (9.53) |
| Africa | 4 (3.18) |
| Year thestudy started | |
| 1973–1998 | 54 (42.86) |
| 1999–2019 | 72 (57.14) |
| Study design | |
| Parallel | 108 (85.71) |
| Crossover | 18 (14.29) |
| Study duration, wk | |
| <12 | 55 (43.65) |
| 12–24 | 54 (42.86) |
| >24 | 17 (13.49) |
| Usage of antihypertensive medications | |
| Yes | 43 (34.13) |
| No | 65 (51.58) |
| Not reported | 18 (14.29) |
| Health status of recruited participants | |
| Hypertension and prehypertension (mixed) | 27 (21.43) |
| Hypertension only | 91 (72.22) |
| Prehypertension only | 8 (6.35) |
America (Black Americans) studies are those from America that were done in Black participants.
Figure 2Network geometry used to assess the comparative effects of 22 nonpharmacologic interventions.
A, Adult with prehypertension to established hypertension. B, Patients with hypertension. The nodes represent 22 nonpharmacologic interventions and usual care. The size of every node is proportional to the number of randomly assigned participants (sample size). Each line represents a direct comparison, and the width of the lines is proportional to the number of studies comparing every pair of interventions. The coding guide, which provides a description of each intervention component, can be found in Table 1. DASH indicates Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension; MBSR, mindfulness‐based stress reduction; and PMR, progressive muscle relaxation.
Figure 3Forest plots for mean changes of blood pressure in adults with prehypertension to established hypertension.
A, Systolic blood pressure. B, Diastolic blood pressure. Mean changes of blood pressure are reported in WMD and 95% CrI for intervention vs usual care. Rectangle represents the point estimate for the effect of each intervention. Horizontal lines indicate 95% CrI. Tables on the left of the forest plot show, for each intervention, the number of direct comparison studies, number of participants, rankings of SUCRA probabilities and quality of evidence. Interventions are ranked according to the rankings of SUCRA. The quality of evidence was classified as high, moderate, low, or very low. CrI indicates credible interval; DASH, Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension; MBSR, mindfulness‐based stress reduction; NA, not available; PMR, progressive muscle relaxation; SUCRA, surface under the cumulative ranking; and WMD, weighted mean difference.
Figure 4Forest plots for mean changes of blood pressure in patients with hypertension.
A, Systolic blood pressure. B, Diastolic blood pressure. Mean changes of blood pressure are reported in WMD and 95% CrI for intervention vs usual care. Rectangle represent the point estimate for the effect of each intervention. Horizontal lines indicate 95% CrI. For each intervention, tables on the left of the forest plot show the number of direct comparison studies, number of participants, rankings of SUCRA probabilities, and quality of evidence. Interventions are ranked according to the rankings of SUCRA. The quality of evidence was classified as high, moderate, low, and very low. CrI indicates credible interval; DASH, Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension; MBSR, mindfulness‐based stress reduction; NA, not available; PMR, progressive muscle relaxation; SUCRA, surface under the cumulative ranking; and WMD, weighted mean difference.