A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Visit-to-visit blood pressure variability and renal outcomes: results from ONTARGET and TRANSCEND trials




AuthorsMancia Giuseppe, Schumacher Helmut, Böhm Michael, Mann Johannes FE, Redon Josep, Facchetti Rita, Schmieder Roland E, Lonn Eva M, Teo Koon K, Yusuf Salim

PublisherLIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS

Publication year2020

JournalJournal of Hypertension

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION

Journal acronymJ HYPERTENS

Volume38

Issue10

First page 2050

Last page2058

Number of pages9

ISSN0263-6352

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1097/HJH.0000000000002567


Abstract
Aims: There is conflicting evidence on whether in treated hypertensive patients the risk of renal outcomes is associated with visit-to-visit SBP variability. Furthermore, limited evidence is available on how important is SBP variability for prediction of renal outcomes compared with on-treatment mean SBP. We addressed these issues in 28 790 participants of the Ongoing Treatment Alone and in combination with Ramipril Global End point Trial and Telmisartan Randomized AssessmeNt Study in ACE iNtolerant Subjects with Cardiovascular Disease trials. 
Methods and results: SBP variability was expressed as the coefficient of variation of the mean with which it showed no relationship. SBP variability and mean values were obtained from five visits during the first 2 years of treatment after the end of the titration phase. Incidence of several renal outcomes (end-stage renal disease, doubling of serum creatinine, new microalbuminuria, new macroalbuminuria and their composite) was calculated from the third year of treatment onward. Patients were divided in quintiles of SBP-coefficient of variation (SBP-CV) or mean SBP, which exhibited superimposable mean blood pressure and SBP-CV values, respectively. A progressive increase of SBP-CV was not accompanied by a parallel increase in a widely adjusted (baseline and on-treatment confounders) risk of most renal outcomes (end-stage renal disease, new macroalbuminuria, new microalbuminuria and their composite) in the subsequent on-treatment years. In contrast, the adjusted risk of most renal outcomes increased progressively from the lowest to the highest quintile of on-treatment mean SBP. Progression from lowest to highest mean on-treatment SBP, but not SBP-CV, was also associated with a less frequent return to normoalbuminuria in patients with initial micro or macroalbuminuria. Renal outcome prediction was slightly improved by the combined use of SBP-CV and mean SBP quintiles. 
Conclusion: Visit-to-visit SBP variability had no major predictive value for the risk of renal outcomes, which, in contrast, was sensitively predicted by mean on-treatment SBP. A further slight increase in prediction of renal outcomes was seen by combining on-treatment mean SBP and variability.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 11:50