The association of intensive blood pressure treatment and non-fatal cardiovascular or serious adverse events in older adults with mortality: mediation analysis in SPRINT.

Pubmed ID: 37185634

Pubmed Central ID: PMC10390235

Journal: European journal of preventive cardiology

Publication Date: Aug. 1, 2023

MeSH Terms: Humans, Aged, Cardiovascular Diseases, Hypertension, Blood Pressure, Cause of Death, Antihypertensive Agents, Mediation Analysis

Grants: P30 AG024827, P30 AG021334, K76AG064428, K76 AG064428, R01 AG078153, R01 AG058883, R01 AG 060499, K23 HL153771, R01 HL 147862, R01 HL151431

Authors: Damluji AA, Rich MW, Forman DE, Odden MC, Krishnaswami A, Goyal P, Kwak MJ, Solomon M, Rana JS, Kado DM

Cite As: Krishnaswami A, Rich MW, Kwak MJ, Goyal P, Forman DE, Damluji AA, Solomon M, Rana JS, Kado DM, Odden MC. The association of intensive blood pressure treatment and non-fatal cardiovascular or serious adverse events in older adults with mortality: mediation analysis in SPRINT. Eur J Prev Cardiol 2023 Aug 1;30(10):996-1004.

Studies:

  • Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial Primary Outcome Paper (SPRINT-POP) Data

Abstract

AIMS: Randomized clinical trials of hypertension treatment intensity evaluate the effects on incident major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) and serious adverse events (SAEs). Occurrences after a non-fatal index event have not been rigorously evaluated. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of intensive (<120 mmHg) to standard (<140 mmHg) blood pressure (BP) treatment with mortality mediated through a non-fatal MACE or non-fatal SAE in 9361 participants in the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial. METHODS AND RESULTS: Logistic regression and causal mediation modelling to obtain direct and mediated effects of intensive BP treatment. Primary outcome was all-cause mortality (ACM). Secondary outcomes were cardiovascular (CVM) and non-CV mortality (non-CVM). The direct effect of intensive treatment was a lowering of ACM [odds ratio (OR) 0.75, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.60-0.94]. The MACE-mediated effect substantially attenuated (OR 0.96, 95% CI: 0.92-0.99) ACM, while the SAE-mediated effect was associated with increased (OR 1.03, 95% CI: 1.01-1.05) ACM. Similar patterns were noted for intensive BP treatment on CVM and non-CVM. We also noted that SAE incidence was 3.9-fold higher than MACE incidence (13.7 vs. 3.5%), and there were a total of 365 (3.9%) ACM cases, with non-CVM being 2.6-fold higher than CVM [2.81% (263/9361) vs. 1.09% (102/9361)]. The SAE to MACE and non-CVM to CVM preponderance was found across all age groups, with the ≥80-year age group having the highest differences. CONCLUSION: The current analytic techniques demonstrated that intensive BP treatment was associated with an attenuated mortality benefit when it was MACE-mediated and possibly harmful when it was SAE-mediated. Current cardiovascular trial reporting of treatment effects does not allow expansion of the lens to focus on important occurrences after the index event.