4.7 Article

Characteristics and Prognosis of Patients With Hypertensive Encephalopathy: A French Nationwide Cohort Study

Journal

HYPERTENSION
Volume 80, Issue 8, Pages 1716-1727

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.123.21226

Keywords

epidemiology; death; dementia; hypertension; stroke

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This study investigated the characteristics and prognosis of hypertensive encephalopathy (HE) and found that HE had a poor prognosis with high risks of death and other complications. Hypertension and concomitant stroke significantly influenced the prognosis of HE.
BACKGROUND:Hypertensive encephalopathy (HE) constitutes a serious condition, usually observed in patients with long-lasting hypertension. Hypertension-associated HE is sometimes differentiated from the stroke-associated hypertensive emergency. Whether prognosis of hypertension-associated and stroke-associated HE is different is unclear. METHODS:Characteristics and prognosis of HE were assessed in this nationwide retrospective cohort study in all patients with an administrative code of HE compared with age-, sex- and year of inclusion-matched controls admitted to French hospitals during the 2014 to 2022 period. RESULTS:HE was identified in 7769 patients. Chronic kidney disease (19.3%), coronary artery disease (13.8%), diabetes (22.1%), and ischemic stroke (5.2%) were frequent but thrombotic microangiopathy, hemolytic-uremic syndrome, systemic sclerosis or renal infarction were <1%. HE prognosis was poor (death: 10.4%/y, heart failure: 8.6%/y, end-stage kidney disease: 9.0%/y, ischemic stroke: 3.6%/y, hemorrhagic stroke: 1.6%/y, dementia: 4.1%/y). The risk of death was increased to a similar extent in patients with HE, regardless of the presence of known hypertension or concomitant stroke (versus patients without HE). Among patients with HE, known hypertension was significantly associated with increased risks of ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke, heart failure, vascular dementia, and all-cause dementia and to a lesser extent with chronic dialysis in multivariable analyses including adjustment on concomitant stroke. CONCLUSIONS:HE remains a considerable health burden and is associated with a poor prognosis. The distinction between hypertension- versus stroke-associated HE is relevant as these 2 situations convey different risks of stroke, heart failure, vascular dementia, and end-stage kidney disease.

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