University of Utah Health Sciences
The collaborative
investigation between the University of Utah, University of Alabama at
Birmingham, and Columbia University, will be published Nov. 9 online in theJournal
of the American College of Cardiology (JACC).
The scientists calculated the potential impact of preliminary
results from the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) that will
be presented in full at the American Heart Association meeting and published
online in the New England Journal of Medicine, also on Nov. 9.
The
initial analysis of SPRINT, reported in Sept., 2015, showed that using
antihypertensive medications to reach a lower SBP target of 120 mmHg could
greatly reduce risk for heart failure, heart attack, and death, compared to a
target of 140 mmHg (SBP is the top number in a blood pressure reading). It's
estimated that one in three U.S. adults have high blood pressure, or
hypertension, a significant health concern.
While new medical guidelines for treating hypertension could be
months to years away, this research finds that more than 16.8 million
Americans, 7.6 percent of the population, could be recommended for intensive
blood pressure management if guidelines incorporate a new, lower, SBP target
based on SPRINT results.
The number represents Americans who meet the same
criteria as SPRINT participants: they are age 50 or older, have an SBP between
130-180 mmHg, are at high risk for cardiovascular disease, and do not have
diabetes or a history of stroke, among other inclusion and exclusion criteria.
The current study also reports that new guidelines may affect
some segments of the population more than others. Compared to Caucasians,
African Americans and Hispanics were less likely to meet SPRINT eligibility
criteria (9 percent vs. 4.8 percent, 4.3 percent).
The differences are largely
due to the fact that these minority populations have a higher prevalence of
diabetes and other health conditions that could preclude them from being SPRINT
eligible. Men were also more likely to be eligible for SPRINT than women (8.8
percent vs. 6.5 percent), in part because unlike men, women tend not to show
increased risk for cardiovascular disease until they are over 65.
However in practice, it's common for physicians to prescribe
treatments to patients who may have not been eligible for a clinical trial that
demonstrated the efficacy and safety of a particular treatment. For example,
some physicians may deviate from SPRINT eligibility by aggressively treating
the blood pressure of any adult over 50, even if they do not have a high risk
of cardiovascular disease.
"Physicians are going to need to decide how far
outside the SPRINT inclusion criteria to go," says co-author Rachel Hess,
M.D., M.S., also a professor of internal medicine and population health
sciences at the University of Utah School of Medicine. "It's going to be a
tough decision."
The numbers of Americans meeting each sequential SPRINT
eligibility requirement are:
- 219 million adults
- 95.1 million age 50 or older
- 37.3 million with elevated blood pressure (?130 mmHg)
- 26.4 million at high risk for cardiovascular disease
- 16.8 million with no diabetes, history of stroke, or other SPRINT exclusion criteria
Potential impacts of SPRINT results on the U.S. population were
based on analyzing data from the 16,260 participants in the National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) between 2007 -- 2012 who met certain
SPRINT inclusion and exclusion criteria.
NHANES includes a representative
cross-section of the American population, allowing for projection of these
findings to the overall population. Most, but not all, SPRINT inclusion and
exclusion criteria were accounted for in NHANES. For example information on
subclinical cardiovascular disease and a history of medical non-adherence are
not represented in the national survey.
New blood pressure guidelines will have to weight potential
adverse effects that could overshadow its benefits, and whether increasing
blood pressure medications over the course of multiple years is cost-effective.
But the numbers obtained in this study offer a glimpse into the potentially
wide ranging impact of changing blood pressure guidelines.
"Given that millions of U.S. adults meet SPRINT eligibility
criteria, the implementation of SPRINT recommendations could have a profound
impact on how blood pressure is treated in this country," says senior
author Paul Muntner, Ph.D., a professor of epidemiology at the University of
Alabama. "Even more important, is its potential for greatly reducing the incidence
of cardiovascular disease."