Representation of Real-World Adults With Chronic Kidney Disease in Clinical Trials Supporting Blood Pressure Treatment Targets.

Pubmed ID: 38533947

Pubmed Central ID: PMC11179783

Journal: Journal of the American Heart Association

Publication Date: April 2, 2024

MeSH Terms: Humans, Adult, Hypertension, Clinical Trials as Topic, Blood Pressure, Cross-Sectional Studies, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic, Antihypertensive Agents

Authors: Zhou M, Odden MC, Li J, Huang M, Montez-Rath ME, Charu V, Kurella Tamura M, An J, Niu F, Sim JJ, Pao AC

Cite As: Li J, An J, Huang M, Zhou M, Montez-Rath ME, Niu F, Sim JJ, Pao AC, Charu V, Odden MC, Kurella Tamura M. Representation of Real-World Adults With Chronic Kidney Disease in Clinical Trials Supporting Blood Pressure Treatment Targets. J Am Heart Assoc 2024 Apr 2;13(7):e031742. Epub 2024 Mar 27.

Studies:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Little is known about how well trial participants with chronic kidney disease (CKD) represent real-world adults with CKD. We assessed the population representativeness of clinical trials supporting the 2021 Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes blood pressure (BP) guidelines in real-world adults with CKD. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using a cross-sectional analysis, we identified patients with CKD who met the guideline definition of hypertension based on use of antihypertensive medications or sustained systolic BP ≥120 mm Hg in 2019 in the Veterans Affairs and Kaiser Permanente of Southern California. We applied the eligibility criteria from 3 BP target trials, SPRINT (Systolic Pressure Intervention Trial), ACCORD (Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes), and AASK (African American Study of Kidney Disease), to estimate the proportion of adults with a systolic BP above the guideline-recommended target and the proportion who met eligibility criteria for ≥1 trial. We identified 503 480 adults in the Veterans Affairs and 73 412 adults in Kaiser Permanente of Southern California with CKD and hypertension in 2019. We estimated 79.7% in the Veterans Affairs and 87.3% in the Kaiser Permanente of Southern California populations had a systolic BP ≥120 mm Hg; only 23.8% [23.7%-24.0%] in the Veterans Affairs and 20.8% [20.5%-21.1%] in Kaiser Permanente of Southern California were trial-eligible. Among trial-ineligible patients, >50% met >1 exclusion criteria. CONCLUSIONS: Major BP target trials were representative of fewer than 1 in 4 real-world adults with CKD and hypertension. A large proportion of adults who are at risk for cardiovascular morbidity from hypertension and susceptible to adverse treatment effects lack relevant treatment information.