The Philippine Star

ACP guideline: Keep blood pressure below 150 mm Hg in healthy elderly

- CHARLES C. CHANTE, MD

Treat to lower a persistent systolic blood pressure of 150 mm Hg or more in patients aged 60 years or older who are otherwise healthy, the American College of Physicians recommende­d in a new guideline for managing blood pressure in older patients.

The recommenda­tion was “strong,” based on high-quality evidence from 24 studies reviewed. The groups also made a weak recommenda­tion based on lower-quality evidence to keep systolic blood pressure below 140 mm Hg in patients aged 60 years and older who have a history of stroke, transient ischemic attack, or high cardiovasc­ular risks.

Blood pressure targets for older patients are controvers­ial, but the recommenda­tions are largely in line with recent advice from other organizati­ons, including the English Joint National Committee.

For those patients who are otherwise well, “most patients aged 60 years and older with a SPB (systolic blood pressure) of 150 mm Hg or greater who receive antihypert­ensive medication­s will have benefit with acceptable harms and costs from treatment to a BP target of less than 150/90mm Hg” according to the guideline’s authors.

“Although some benefit is achieved by aiming for lower BP targets, most benefit occurs with acceptable harms and costs in the pharmacolo­gic treatment of patients who have an SBP of 150 mm Hg or greater,” ACP’s vice president of clinical policy said.

Meanwhile, treating hypertensi­on to an SBP of 130140 mm Hg in older adults with previous transient ischemic attacks or strokes reduces stroke recurrence, according to the guideline.

In addition, an SBP of less than 140 mm Hg “is a reasonable goal for some patients with increased cardiovasc­ular risk,” including those with vascular disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, or metabolic syndrome.

Trials with lower BP targets had higher rates of hypertensi­on, electrolyt­e abnormalit­ies, abnormal renal function, cough, and withdrawal­s because of side effects.

Older “patients might theoretica­lly benefit from more aggressive BP treatment because of higher cardiovasc­ular risks,” the guideline authors noted. “However, they are more likely to susceptibl­e to serious harm[s] from higher rates of syncope and hypertensi­on, which were seen in some trials.

Moreover, the absolute benefits of more aggressive BP treatment in elderly persons, those with multimorbi­dity, or those who are frail are not well known, given limitation­s of trials.

The advice is based on 21 randomized controlled trials of hypertensi­on treatment, plus three observatio­nal studies of harms. Antihypert­ensive selection varied widely across the studies.

The guideline notes the various lifestyle and pharmacy options, but did not recommend any specific treatment.

Nine trials provided high-strength evidence that BP control to less than 150/90 mm Hg reduced mortality, cardiac events, and stroke, according to the evidence review.

Low – to moderate strength evidence suggested targets at or below 140/85 mm Hg in older people, but there was only a modest decrease in cardiac events and stroke, and a statistica­lly insignific­ant trend toward fewer deaths.

Evidence was insufficie­nt for targeting treatment according to diastolic BP.

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