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High Blood Pressure Guideline Lowers Definition of Hypertension

by Suchitra Chari on July 26, 2018 at 4:54 PM
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Highlights:

The American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA) recently released a clinical practice guideline for the prevention, detection, evaluation, and management / treatment of high blood pressure (BP) or hypertension in adults.


The committee has made changes to the classification of blood pressure, including the definition of hypertension, and has set out new approaches on how to choose the treatments, and also proposed different goals to reduce hypertension.

‘The 2017 ACC/AHA hypertension guideline may be beneficial in increasing hypertension or blood pressure awareness, encourage lifestyle modification and focus on initiation and intensification of antihypertensive medication on US adults with high CVD risk.’

Individuals who were not classified as being hypertensive earlier now belong to the category, since ACC and AHA have lowered the cut off of BP readings from 140/90 to 130/80 mm Hg. The upper end of the blood pressure that was earlier pre-hypertension is now defined as stage 1 hypertension since those people who are at systolic 130-139 mm Hg and diastolic 80-89 mm Hg have an approximately 2-fold increase in cardiovascular risk (CVD) compared with adults with normal BP. Systolic is the higher number, and diastolic is the lower number in your BP reading.

A 21-member panel of multidisciplinary experts that included physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and patient representatives who had no BP-related industry relationships were instrumental in developing the 2017 guideline.

High blood pressure should be treated earlier with lifestyle changes and in some patients with medication - at 130/80 mm Hg rather than 140/90 - based on the new guideline. The definition of high blood pressure is lowered to account for complications that can occur at lower numbers and to allow for earlier intervention.

The new definition will result in 46 percent of the U.S. adult population having high blood pressure, with the greatest impact expected among younger people. Also, the prevalence of high blood pressure is expected to double among women less than 45, and triple among men under age 45. However, only a small increase is expected in the number of adults requiring antihypertensive medication.

"You've already doubled your risk of cardiovascular complications compared to those with a normal level of blood pressure," said Paul K. Whelton, MB, MD, MSc, FACC, lead author of the guideline. "We want to be straight with people - if you already have a doubling of risk, you need to know about it. It doesn't mean you need medication, but it's a yellow light that you need to be lowering your blood pressure, mainly with non-drug approaches."

Why did the committee move the bar down?

The SPRINT trial (Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial) was one of the trials the ACC/AHA took into account to form the new guideline. The SPRINT trial used automated office BP measurement (without a clinician in the examination room). The BP readings obtained are 5 to 10 mm Hg lower than those if a clinician were to take it, and are more representative of out-of-office readings.

Salient Features of the New Guidelines

A recent analysis published in the BMJ journal quotes that according to the new 2017 ACC/AHA guideline, 70 million adults in the United States aged 45 to 75 years would be hypertensive, 7.5 million would be advised to start drug treatment and 14 million would be advised to receive more intensive drug treatment.

Labeling a person as hypertensive may have some drawbacks - psychological effects of a disease label, overmedication or adverse effects of unnecessary treatments, and consequences of poor measurement may do more harm than the small reduction in CVD events found in trials of high-risk persons, like the SPRINT trial. The majority of the participants were already on medications when their BP targets were reduced.

The SPRINT trial also encountered serious adverse effects in both the control and the intervention groups. To address this, Paul K. Whelton says that clinicians should be savvy and knowledgeable. When they embark on therapy, especially intensive therapy, it has to be done and monitored carefully, and if there are any adverse outcomes like symptomatic hypotension (low blood pressure) or electrolyte abnormalities, the drugs should be changed or their dose modified.

The AAFP states that treating hypertension in asymptomatic (showing no symptoms) patients is like treating a risk factor to prevent disease, and not actually treating a disease to relieve suffering. Many people might not benefit, and might be harmed when taking preventive medication. "Choosing a threshold and target for treatment should be based on the science supporting CVD risk reduction, while considering the benefits and harms in individual patient circumstances and respecting patient choice."

References:

  1. Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Management of High Blood Pressure in Adults: Synopsis of the2017 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Hypertension Guideline Free - (http://annals.org/aim/fullarticle/2670318/prevention-detection-evaluation-management-high-blood-pressure-adults-synopsis-2017)
  2. ACC/AHA Hypertension Guideline: What Is New? What Do We Do? - (https:www.aafp.org/afp/2018/0315/p372.html)
  3. New ACC/AHA High Blood Pressure Guidelines Lower Definition ofHypertension - (https:www.acc.org/latest-in-cardiology/articles/2017/11/08/11/47/mon-5pm-bp-guideline-aha-2017)
  4. 2017 Guideline for High Blood Pressure in Adults - (https:www.acc.org/latest-in-cardiology/ten-points-to-remember/2017/11/09/11/41/2017-guideline-for-high-blood-pressure-in-adults)
  5. AAFP Decides toNot Endorse AHA/ACC Hypertension Guideline - (https:www.aafp.org/news/health-of-the-public/20171212notendorseaha-accgdlne.html)
  6. Katy J. L. Bell, Jenny Doust, Paul Glasziou. Incremental Benefits andHarms of the 2017 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association High Blood Pressure Guideline. JAMA InternalMedicine, 2018; DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.0310


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