4.6 Article

Effectiveness of blood pressure-lowering drug treatment by levels of absolute risk: post hoc analysis of the Australian National Blood Pressure Study

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017723

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
  2. Life Insurance Medical Research Fund of Australia and New Zealand
  3. Victorian Government
  4. Clive Foundation
  5. Vera Ramaciotti Foundation
  6. Raine Medical Research Foundation of Western Australia

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Objectives In many current guidelines, blood pressure (BP)-lowering drug treatment for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) is based on absolute risk. However, in clinical practice, therapeutic decisions are often based on BP levels alone. We sought to investigate which approach was superior by conducting a post hoc analysis of the Australian National Blood Pressure (ANBP) cohort, a seminal study establishing the efficacy of BP lowering in 'mild hypertensive' persons. Design A post hoc subgroup analysis of the ANBP trial results by baseline absolute risk tertile. Setting and participants 3244 participants aged 35-69 years in a community-based randomised placebo controlled trial of blood pressure-lowering medication. Interventions Chlorothiazide500 mg versus placebo. Primary outcome measures All-cause mortality and nonfatal events (non-fatal CUD, congestive cardiac failure, renal failure, hypertensive retinopathy or encephalopathy). Results Treatment effects were assessed by HR, absolute risk reduction and number needed to treat. Participants had an average 5-year CVD risk in the intermediate range (10.5 6.5) with moderately elevated BP (mean 159/103 mmHg) and were middle aged (52 8 years). In a subgroup analysis, the relative effects (HR) and absolute effects (absolute risk reduction and number needed to treat) did not statistically differ across the three risk groups except for the absolute benefit in all-cause mortality (p for heterogeneity=0.04). With respect to absolute benefit, drug treatment significantly reduced the number of events in the high-risk group regarding any event with a number needed to treat of 18 (10 to 64), death from any cause with 45 (25 to 196) and major CVD events with 23 (12 to 193). Conclusion Our analysis confirms that the benefit of treatment was substantial only in the high-risk tertile, reaffirming the rationale of treating elevated blood pressure in the setting of all risk factors rather than in isolation.

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