Intensive blood pressure lowering in different age categories: insights from the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Christina Byrne
  • Manan Pareek
  • Muthiah Vaduganathan
  • Biering-Sørensen, Tor
  • Arman Qamar
  • Ambarish Pandey
  • Thomas Bastholm Olesen
  • Michael Hecht Olsen
  • Deepak L. Bhatt

Aims The 2018 ESC/ESH guidelines for hypertension recommend differential management of patients who are = 80 years of age. However, it is unclear whether intensive blood pressure towering is well-tolerated and modifies risk uniformly across the age spectrum.

Methods and results SPRINT randomized 9361 high-risk adults without diabetes and age >= 50 years with systolic blood pressure 130-180 mmHg to either intensive or standard antihypertensive treatment. The primary efficacy endpoint was the composite of acute coronary syndromes, stroke, heart failure, or death from cardiovascular causes. The primary safety endpoint was composite serious adverse events. We assessed whether age modified the efficacy and safety of intensive vs. standard blood pressure lowering using Cox proportional-hazards regression and restricted cubic splines. In all, 3805 (41%), 4390 (47%), and 1166 (12%) were = 80 years. Mean age was similar between the two study groups (intensive group 67.9 +/- 9.4years vs. standard group 67.9 +/- 9.5 years; P=0.94). Median follow-up was 3.3 years. In multivariable models, age was linearly associated with the risk of stroke (P<0.001) and non-linearly associated with the risk of primary efficacy events, death from cardiovascular causes, death from any cause, heart failure, and serious adverse events (P 0.05).

Conclusion In SPRINT, the benefits and risks of intensive blood pressure lowering did not differ according to the age categories proposed by the ESC/ESH guidelines for hypertension.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Pharmacotherapy
Volume6
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)356-363
Number of pages8
ISSN2055-6837
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

    Research areas

  • Age, Blood pressure, Hypertension, Safety, CARDIOVASCULAR EVENTS, HYPERTENSION, FRAILTY, DISEASE, PEOPLE, RISK

ID: 256934601