13 мая, 2020

Confirmed: Lowering blood pressure can reduce the risk of dementia

A robust meta-analysis provides evidence of class I in favor of antihypertensive treatment.

Knowledge

  • Elderly patients with hypertension whose blood pressure-_(BP) is effectively treated with medication have a lower risk of developing dementia.
  • Dementia prevention thus provides another reason for the treatment of hypertension, in addition to the positive effect on cardiovascular risk.

Why this matters

  • Randomised controlled trials evaluating BP-lowering agents and the occurrence of dementia have led to different conclusions.
  • Some data suggest in patients aged> 80  years to a U-shaped relationship between the   BP and dementia, which in turn has led to caution about aggressive BP lowering.
  • Previous meta-analyses worked with the overall results, not individual patient data.
  • In this study, raw data from individual patients from the ADVANCE, HYVET, PROGRESS, SHEP and SYST-EUR studies were pooled.
    • These are the only 5  Studies that included placebo control and investigated a dementia endpoint.
    • Ethically, a repetition of these studies is not justifiable, as it has now been convincingly demonstrated that lowering blood pressure improves cardiovascular outcomes.
  • These are the only 5  Studies that included placebo control and investigated a dementia endpoint.
  • Ethically, a repetition of these studies is not justifiable, as it has now been convincingly demonstrated that lowering blood pressure improves cardiovascular outcomes.

Study design

  • Pooled meta-analysis of individual patient data from 5 randomized double-blind placebo-controlled studies in antihypertensive treatment (n = 28,008)
  • Main result: emerging dementia
  • Funding: None

Key results

  • Medium Age: 69,1  Years
  • Median follow-up: 4.3  years
  • BP reduction with antihypertensive drugs resulted in:
    • a mean reduction in blood pressure of ~ 10/4 mmHg.
    • a lower risk of dementia: aOR: 0.87 (95 %-CI: 0.75–0.99).
  • A greater reduction in BP was associated with a greater reduction in risk.
  • Age and gender did not change the risk.
  • a mean reduction in blood pressure of ~ 10/4 mmHg.
  • a lower risk of dementia: aOR: 0.87 (95 %-CI: 0.75–0.99).

Limitations

  • Treatment effect may have been underestimated by analysis.
  • No data on dementia type

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