Balance of benefits and harms of different blood pressure targets in people with multiple chronic conditions: a quantitative benefit-harm assessment.

Pubmed ID: 31471435

Pubmed Central ID: PMC6720326

Journal: BMJ open

Publication Date: Aug. 30, 2019

Affiliation: Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland miloalan.puhan@uzh.ch.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Hypertension, Risk Assessment, Blood Pressure, Antihypertensive Agents, Reference Values, Multiple Chronic Conditions

Authors: Aschmann HE, Boyd CM, Robbins CW, Mularski RA, Chan WV, Sheehan OC, Wilson RF, Bennett WL, Bayliss EA, Yu T, Leff B, Armacost K, Glover C, Maslow K, Mintz S, Puhan MA

Cite As: Aschmann HE, Boyd CM, Robbins CW, Mularski RA, Chan WV, Sheehan OC, Wilson RF, Bennett WL, Bayliss EA, Yu T, Leff B, Armacost K, Glover C, Maslow K, Mintz S, Puhan MA. Balance of benefits and harms of different blood pressure targets in people with multiple chronic conditions: a quantitative benefit-harm assessment. BMJ Open 2019 Aug 30;9(8):e028438.

Studies:

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Recent studies suggest that a systolic blood pressure (SBP) target of 120 mm Hg is appropriate for people with hypertension, but this is debated particularly in people with multiple chronic conditions (MCC). We aimed to quantitatively determine whether benefits of a lower SBP target justify increased risks of harm in people with MCC, considering patient-valued outcomes and their relative importance. DESIGN: Highly stratified quantitative benefit-harm assessment based on various input data identified as the most valid and applicable from a systematic review of evidence and based on weights from a patient preference survey. SETTING: Outpatient care. PARTICIPANTS: Hypertensive patients, grouped by age, gender, prior history of stroke, chronic heart failure, chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus. INTERVENTIONS: SBP target of 120 versus 140 mm Hg for patients without history of stroke. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Probability that the benefits of a SBP target of 120 mm Hg outweigh the harms compared with 140 mm Hg over 5 years (primary) with thresholds >0.6 (120 mm Hg better), <0.4 (140 mm Hg better) and 0.4 to 0.6 (unclear), number of prevented clinical events (secondary), calculated with the Gail/National Cancer Institute approach. RESULTS: Considering individual patient preferences had a substantial impact on the benefit-harm balance. With average preferences, 120 mm Hg was the better target compared with 140 mm Hg for many subgroups of patients without prior stroke, especially in patients over 75. For women below 65 with chronic kidney disease and without diabetes and prior stroke, 140 mm Hg was better. The analyses did not include mild adverse effects, and apply only to patients who tolerate antihypertensive treatment. CONCLUSIONS: For most patients, a lower SBP target was beneficial, but this depended also on individual preferences, implying individual decision-making is important. Our modelling allows for individualised treatment targets based on patient preferences, age, gender and co-morbidities.