New Blood Pressure Guideline Sets Lower 130/80 Threshold
New Blood Pressure Guideline Sets Lower 130/80 Threshold
The new US blood pressure guideline lowers the definition of high blood pressure to 130/80 mm Hg. This means that more than 100 million adults will now have high blood pressure, though many will be unaware of the diagnosis.
The 2017 American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association (AHA) Guideline for the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation and Management of High Blood Pressure was released today at the American Heart Association meeting in Anaheim and published simultaneously in Hypertension and the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
2017 ACC/AHA/AAPA/ABC/ACPM/AGS/APhA/ASH/ASPC/NMA/PCNA Guideline for the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Management of High Blood Pressure in Adults /
2017 ACC/AHA/AAPA/ABC/ACPM/AGS/APhA/ASH/ASPC/NMA/PCNA Guideline for the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Management of High Blood Pressure in Adults
The new guideline eliminates the category of prehypertension. The new blood pressure categories are:
• Normal:<120/80 mm Hg;
• Elevated:Systolic between 120-129 and diastolic less than 80;
• Stage 1: Systolic between 130-139 or diastolic between 80-89;
• Stage 2: Systolic at least 140 or diastolic at least 90 mm Hg;
• Hypertensive crisis: Systolic >180 and/or diastolic >120.
[98] Does SPRINT change our approach to blood pressure targets?
http://www.ti.ubc.ca/2016/04/07/98-sprint-change-approach-blood-pressure-targets/
Therapeutics Letter #821 summarized evidence from the Cochrane systematic review, Treatment blood pressure targets for hypertension.2 The Cochrane review was based on the 7 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) designed to test treatment targets that were available as of October 2008. The conclusion was that “Treating patients to lower than standard blood pressure (BP) targets (≤ 140-160/90-100 mmHg) does not reduce mortality or morbidity.”
SPRINT
In September 2015, Systolic blood PRessure INtervention Trial (SPRINT) added a new trial that studied BP targets. It was stopped early for benefit. Results were published in November 2015.3 SPRINT randomly assigned 9361 persons with a systolic BP of 130 mmHg or higher and an increased cardiovascular risk (but without diabetes or prior stroke) to a low systolic BP target of < 120 mmHg or a standard target of < 140 mmHg. SPRINT was an open label trial conducted at 102 sites. The average achieved BP at one year in the low BP target group was 121/69 versus 136/76 mmHg in the standard BP target group. The average number of antihypertensive drugs in the low BP target group was 2.8, vs. 1.8 in the standard BP target group.
Benefits
After an average duration of 3.3 years, the primary outcome (a composite of myocardial infarction, acute coronary syndrome, stroke, acute decompensated heart failure, or death from cardiovascular causes) was decreased in the low BP target group at 5.2%, vs. 6.8% in the standard BP target group, RR 0.76 [0.65, 0.90], ARR 1.6%, NNT 63 for 3.3 years.
Harms
Specific serious adverse events classified as possibly or definitely related to the intervention were increased in the low BP target group, 4.7%, vs. 2.5% in the standard BP target group, RR 1.87 [1.50, 2.33] ARI 2.2%, NNTH 46 for 3.3 years. This was due mainly to a 1.2% absolute increase in acute kidney injury or acute renal failure in the low BP target group.
Overall effect
Total serious adverse events were appropriately defined as fatal or life-threatening events resulting in clinically significant or persistent disability, or events that required or prolonged a hospitalization. The number of people with one or more serious adverse events was numerically greater in the low BP target group at 38.3% vs. 37.1% in the standard BP target group, RR 1.03 [0.98, 1.09]. However, deaths were significantly lower in the low BP target group at 3.3%, vs. 4.5% in the standard BP target group, RR 0.74 [0.60, 0.91], ARR 1.2%. These two findings are hard to reconcile, insofar as this means the number of people with non-fatal serious adverse events was significantly greater in the low BP target group, at 35.0% vs. 32.6% in the standard BP target group, RR 1.07 [1.02, 1.14], ARI 2.4%.
Risk of bias
Because of the BP target design, investigators could not be blinded to treatment group. This results in a high risk of performance and detection bias. Performance bias means the people caring for the patients treat the lower BP target group preferentially. Detection bias means investigators ascertain the outcomes in favour of the lower target group. Evidence of such bias in SPRINT is that the observed mean BP difference between the two groups of 15/7 mmHg is much greater than expected from a mean difference of one antihypertensive drug (2.8 vs. 1.8) between the target groups. The average BP reduction produced by a single antihypertensive drug has been studied extensively and estimated at about 8/5 mmHg.4-7
Stopping the trial early for benefit also adds additional risk of bias in favour of the lower BP target.8 This action would tend to exaggerate the benefits and underestimate the harms outlined above. We judge that the outcome least susceptible to bias is the total serious adverse events (SAE), because investigators presently do not recognize this outcome as an important way to assess the benefits and harms of an intervention.
Clinical implications of SPRINT
Most of the editorials and commentaries about the SPRINT trial have given it a positive spin and recommended that target BPs should be lower as a result of this trial. These commentaries have ignored the finding that individuals experiencing at least one serious adverse event were numerically increased in the low BP target group. None of these commentaries have situated SPRINT into the totality of available evidence on BP lowering targets.
Systematic review
The relevant Cochrane review has the objective: To determine if there is a reduction in total mortality and morbidity associated with treatment of blood pressure to “lower targets” (≤ 135/85 mmHg) as compared with “standard targets” (≤ 140-160/90-100 mmHg) in the management of patients with elevated arterial blood pressure. First published in 2009, it is now being updated. In addition to SPRINT, two large trials, ACCORD and SPS3 have been added to the review.9,10 In the updated review, mortality data from 11 RCTs (N = 38,584) indicate that lower targets do not reduce total mortality, RR 0.95 [0.86, 1.05]. Furthermore this analysis demonstrates that the mortality data from SPRINT are discordant with the rest of the trials. In a sensitivity analysis with SPRINT removed, the RR for total mortality in the remaining 10 RCTs (N = 29,223) increased to RR 1.03 [0. 92, 1.05]. Unfortunately, total serious adverse events were reported in only 3 of the 11 RCTs. In these 3 RCTs (N = 14,432), total serious adverse events were not decreased in the low BP target group, RR 1.03 [0.99, 1.08].
Other non-Cochrane systematic reviews
Systematic reviews that combine all RCTs comparing more intensive with less intensive BP therapy11,12 are misleading and should not be used as evidence in favour of lower targets. These reviews include trials with markedly different targets, for example, a trial comparing a BP target of < 150/85 with < 180/105 mmHg.13
Conclusions
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At the present time, lower BP targets (≤ 135/85 mmHg) have not been demonstrated to reduce mortality or total serious adverse events as compared with standard BP targets (≤ 140-160/90-100 mmHg).
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Careful analysis of the SPRINT trial reveals that benefits of a lower blood pressure target in high-risk nondiabetic people do not outweigh harms.
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Critical appraisal of systematic reviews and clinical trial reports often leads to interpretation and conclusions different from initial impressions.