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Maximizing Stroke Risk Reduction in Elderly Hypertensives

NEW ORLEANS – Calcium channel blockers and diuretics are the best drugs for treating hypertension in the elderly because they are the most effective at reducing the risk of what elderly patients fear most: stroke, Dr. Norman M. Kaplan asserted at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

"Coronary disease remains by far the most common cause of mortality [in the United States], but stroke poses the greatest threat to the elderly, not coronary disease," said Dr. Kaplan, professor of internal medicine at the University of Texas, Dallas.

    Dr. Norman M. Kaplan

He presented a state-of-the-art perspective on antihypertensive therapy in the elderly from the unique vantage point of having served as a member of the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth Joint National Committees on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure.

Dr. Kaplan noted that a British meta-analysis of 46 randomized trials comparing each of the five major classes of antihypertensive drugs with any other class showed that all of the classes were similarly effective in preventing both coronary disease events and strokes, with one exception: calcium channel blockers had a significantly greater preventive effect on stroke than other agents. Diuretics showed a trend in the same direction that didn’t reach statistical significance (BMJ 2009;338:b1665 [doi:10.1136/BMJ.b1665]).

More recently, a secondary analysis of the 19,257-subject ASCOT (Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial) demonstrated that calcium channel blocker–based antihypertensive therapy was particularly effective against stroke in the population most in need of such protection: the elderly. Although there was no significant difference in strokes between amlodipine- and atenolol-based therapy in patients younger than age 65 years, there was a highly significant 30% relative risk reduction with amlodipine in the over-65 group (J. Hypertens. 2011;29:583-91).

The latest thinking regarding mechanism of benefit is that calcium channel blockers and diuretics are more effective at reducing stroke risk because they decrease within-individual variation in systolic blood pressure, unlike angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, and beta-blockers, all of which significantly increase it. In a meta-analysis of 389 randomized, controlled trials of antihypertensive therapy, stroke risk proved strongly related to this interindividual variation in blood pressure (Lancet 2010;375:906-15).

In addition to reducing stroke risk, calcium channel blockers may also have a neuroprotective effect. A French study of 378 elderly, nondemented, hypertensive patients with the complaint of memory loss showed that memory scores were significantly better in those on a calcium channel blocker than on any other class of antihypertensive medication (J. Hypertens. 2010;28:2485-93). Although that’s an intriguing finding, this was an observational study and needs confirmation, in Dr. Kaplan’s view.

Elderly hypertensives predominantly have isolated systolic hypertension. Because of the extensive body of evidence showing that such patients have a good response rate to diuretic monotherapy, he recommends using a diuretic as the first-line drug.

"I would start chlorthalidone – now having a resurgence as the diuretic of choice – at 12.5 mg/day, and add a calcium channel blocker if additional therapy is needed to reach 150/70 mm Hg, which I think is a rational goal to aim for in the elderly," he said.

Indeed, although the 7th Joint National Committee calls 140 mm Hg the upper limit of normal systolic blood pressure at all ages, nearly all the randomized trials that have shown a protective value for antihypertensive therapy in the elderly enrolled patients with a baseline systolic pressure in excess of 160 mm Hg, and achieved an on-treatment systolic pressure in the 150s or 160s.

"I do not think the evidence we have to date shows protective value for treatment in patients with a baseline systolic blood pressure below 160 mm Hg. There is evidence to suggest that if we lower the elderly patient’s systolic blood pressure more than 10-15 mm Hg, we may be invoking additional trouble rather than protecting the patient," said Dr. Kaplan.

"These are old people who obviously have atherosclerotic vascular disease, even if they don’t show it. Reduction in diastolic blood pressure to 65 mm Hg or lower may reduce their coronary perfusion – which occurs only during diastole – to a degree that could invoke a cardiovascular catastrophe," he continued.

Other important aspects of treating elderly hypertensive patients include identifying and overcoming postural hypotension, encouraging the consumption of one or two alcoholic drinks per day for the well-documented health benefits, starting a statin, and measuring home blood pressures to ensure that an individual really is being treated adequately, Dr. Kaplan said.

The risks posed by orthostatic hypotension were recently highlighted in a study of 374 unselected ambulatory adults with an average age of 70 years and no known cardiovascular disease or other comorbidities. An orthostatic decrease in systolic blood pressure greater than 20 mm Hg was present 2 minutes after standing in 12% of them. Over roughly 1 year of follow-up, cardiovascular events were 2.4-fold more frequent in that patient subset (Hypertension 2010;56:56-61).

 

 

There are no safe and effective medications for the treatment of orthostatic hypotension. Fortunately, this condition generally responds to nondrug measures, including avoidance of fluid-volume depletion, taking up to 2 full minutes to rise from supine to standing in the morning, raising the head of the bed 15 degrees to help maintain a degree of sympathetic nervous system activation during the night, eating a small breakfast, and crossing the legs when feeling unsteady while standing.

Dr. Kaplan disclosed that he is on the speakers bureaus for Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Merck, Novartis, and Bayer.

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NEW ORLEANS – Calcium channel blockers and diuretics are the best drugs for treating hypertension in the elderly because they are the most effective at reducing the risk of what elderly patients fear most: stroke, Dr. Norman M. Kaplan asserted at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

"Coronary disease remains by far the most common cause of mortality [in the United States], but stroke poses the greatest threat to the elderly, not coronary disease," said Dr. Kaplan, professor of internal medicine at the University of Texas, Dallas.

    Dr. Norman M. Kaplan

He presented a state-of-the-art perspective on antihypertensive therapy in the elderly from the unique vantage point of having served as a member of the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth Joint National Committees on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure.

Dr. Kaplan noted that a British meta-analysis of 46 randomized trials comparing each of the five major classes of antihypertensive drugs with any other class showed that all of the classes were similarly effective in preventing both coronary disease events and strokes, with one exception: calcium channel blockers had a significantly greater preventive effect on stroke than other agents. Diuretics showed a trend in the same direction that didn’t reach statistical significance (BMJ 2009;338:b1665 [doi:10.1136/BMJ.b1665]).

More recently, a secondary analysis of the 19,257-subject ASCOT (Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial) demonstrated that calcium channel blocker–based antihypertensive therapy was particularly effective against stroke in the population most in need of such protection: the elderly. Although there was no significant difference in strokes between amlodipine- and atenolol-based therapy in patients younger than age 65 years, there was a highly significant 30% relative risk reduction with amlodipine in the over-65 group (J. Hypertens. 2011;29:583-91).

The latest thinking regarding mechanism of benefit is that calcium channel blockers and diuretics are more effective at reducing stroke risk because they decrease within-individual variation in systolic blood pressure, unlike angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, and beta-blockers, all of which significantly increase it. In a meta-analysis of 389 randomized, controlled trials of antihypertensive therapy, stroke risk proved strongly related to this interindividual variation in blood pressure (Lancet 2010;375:906-15).

In addition to reducing stroke risk, calcium channel blockers may also have a neuroprotective effect. A French study of 378 elderly, nondemented, hypertensive patients with the complaint of memory loss showed that memory scores were significantly better in those on a calcium channel blocker than on any other class of antihypertensive medication (J. Hypertens. 2010;28:2485-93). Although that’s an intriguing finding, this was an observational study and needs confirmation, in Dr. Kaplan’s view.

Elderly hypertensives predominantly have isolated systolic hypertension. Because of the extensive body of evidence showing that such patients have a good response rate to diuretic monotherapy, he recommends using a diuretic as the first-line drug.

"I would start chlorthalidone – now having a resurgence as the diuretic of choice – at 12.5 mg/day, and add a calcium channel blocker if additional therapy is needed to reach 150/70 mm Hg, which I think is a rational goal to aim for in the elderly," he said.

Indeed, although the 7th Joint National Committee calls 140 mm Hg the upper limit of normal systolic blood pressure at all ages, nearly all the randomized trials that have shown a protective value for antihypertensive therapy in the elderly enrolled patients with a baseline systolic pressure in excess of 160 mm Hg, and achieved an on-treatment systolic pressure in the 150s or 160s.

"I do not think the evidence we have to date shows protective value for treatment in patients with a baseline systolic blood pressure below 160 mm Hg. There is evidence to suggest that if we lower the elderly patient’s systolic blood pressure more than 10-15 mm Hg, we may be invoking additional trouble rather than protecting the patient," said Dr. Kaplan.

"These are old people who obviously have atherosclerotic vascular disease, even if they don’t show it. Reduction in diastolic blood pressure to 65 mm Hg or lower may reduce their coronary perfusion – which occurs only during diastole – to a degree that could invoke a cardiovascular catastrophe," he continued.

Other important aspects of treating elderly hypertensive patients include identifying and overcoming postural hypotension, encouraging the consumption of one or two alcoholic drinks per day for the well-documented health benefits, starting a statin, and measuring home blood pressures to ensure that an individual really is being treated adequately, Dr. Kaplan said.

The risks posed by orthostatic hypotension were recently highlighted in a study of 374 unselected ambulatory adults with an average age of 70 years and no known cardiovascular disease or other comorbidities. An orthostatic decrease in systolic blood pressure greater than 20 mm Hg was present 2 minutes after standing in 12% of them. Over roughly 1 year of follow-up, cardiovascular events were 2.4-fold more frequent in that patient subset (Hypertension 2010;56:56-61).

 

 

There are no safe and effective medications for the treatment of orthostatic hypotension. Fortunately, this condition generally responds to nondrug measures, including avoidance of fluid-volume depletion, taking up to 2 full minutes to rise from supine to standing in the morning, raising the head of the bed 15 degrees to help maintain a degree of sympathetic nervous system activation during the night, eating a small breakfast, and crossing the legs when feeling unsteady while standing.

Dr. Kaplan disclosed that he is on the speakers bureaus for Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Merck, Novartis, and Bayer.

NEW ORLEANS – Calcium channel blockers and diuretics are the best drugs for treating hypertension in the elderly because they are the most effective at reducing the risk of what elderly patients fear most: stroke, Dr. Norman M. Kaplan asserted at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

"Coronary disease remains by far the most common cause of mortality [in the United States], but stroke poses the greatest threat to the elderly, not coronary disease," said Dr. Kaplan, professor of internal medicine at the University of Texas, Dallas.

    Dr. Norman M. Kaplan

He presented a state-of-the-art perspective on antihypertensive therapy in the elderly from the unique vantage point of having served as a member of the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth Joint National Committees on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure.

Dr. Kaplan noted that a British meta-analysis of 46 randomized trials comparing each of the five major classes of antihypertensive drugs with any other class showed that all of the classes were similarly effective in preventing both coronary disease events and strokes, with one exception: calcium channel blockers had a significantly greater preventive effect on stroke than other agents. Diuretics showed a trend in the same direction that didn’t reach statistical significance (BMJ 2009;338:b1665 [doi:10.1136/BMJ.b1665]).

More recently, a secondary analysis of the 19,257-subject ASCOT (Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial) demonstrated that calcium channel blocker–based antihypertensive therapy was particularly effective against stroke in the population most in need of such protection: the elderly. Although there was no significant difference in strokes between amlodipine- and atenolol-based therapy in patients younger than age 65 years, there was a highly significant 30% relative risk reduction with amlodipine in the over-65 group (J. Hypertens. 2011;29:583-91).

The latest thinking regarding mechanism of benefit is that calcium channel blockers and diuretics are more effective at reducing stroke risk because they decrease within-individual variation in systolic blood pressure, unlike angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, and beta-blockers, all of which significantly increase it. In a meta-analysis of 389 randomized, controlled trials of antihypertensive therapy, stroke risk proved strongly related to this interindividual variation in blood pressure (Lancet 2010;375:906-15).

In addition to reducing stroke risk, calcium channel blockers may also have a neuroprotective effect. A French study of 378 elderly, nondemented, hypertensive patients with the complaint of memory loss showed that memory scores were significantly better in those on a calcium channel blocker than on any other class of antihypertensive medication (J. Hypertens. 2010;28:2485-93). Although that’s an intriguing finding, this was an observational study and needs confirmation, in Dr. Kaplan’s view.

Elderly hypertensives predominantly have isolated systolic hypertension. Because of the extensive body of evidence showing that such patients have a good response rate to diuretic monotherapy, he recommends using a diuretic as the first-line drug.

"I would start chlorthalidone – now having a resurgence as the diuretic of choice – at 12.5 mg/day, and add a calcium channel blocker if additional therapy is needed to reach 150/70 mm Hg, which I think is a rational goal to aim for in the elderly," he said.

Indeed, although the 7th Joint National Committee calls 140 mm Hg the upper limit of normal systolic blood pressure at all ages, nearly all the randomized trials that have shown a protective value for antihypertensive therapy in the elderly enrolled patients with a baseline systolic pressure in excess of 160 mm Hg, and achieved an on-treatment systolic pressure in the 150s or 160s.

"I do not think the evidence we have to date shows protective value for treatment in patients with a baseline systolic blood pressure below 160 mm Hg. There is evidence to suggest that if we lower the elderly patient’s systolic blood pressure more than 10-15 mm Hg, we may be invoking additional trouble rather than protecting the patient," said Dr. Kaplan.

"These are old people who obviously have atherosclerotic vascular disease, even if they don’t show it. Reduction in diastolic blood pressure to 65 mm Hg or lower may reduce their coronary perfusion – which occurs only during diastole – to a degree that could invoke a cardiovascular catastrophe," he continued.

Other important aspects of treating elderly hypertensive patients include identifying and overcoming postural hypotension, encouraging the consumption of one or two alcoholic drinks per day for the well-documented health benefits, starting a statin, and measuring home blood pressures to ensure that an individual really is being treated adequately, Dr. Kaplan said.

The risks posed by orthostatic hypotension were recently highlighted in a study of 374 unselected ambulatory adults with an average age of 70 years and no known cardiovascular disease or other comorbidities. An orthostatic decrease in systolic blood pressure greater than 20 mm Hg was present 2 minutes after standing in 12% of them. Over roughly 1 year of follow-up, cardiovascular events were 2.4-fold more frequent in that patient subset (Hypertension 2010;56:56-61).

 

 

There are no safe and effective medications for the treatment of orthostatic hypotension. Fortunately, this condition generally responds to nondrug measures, including avoidance of fluid-volume depletion, taking up to 2 full minutes to rise from supine to standing in the morning, raising the head of the bed 15 degrees to help maintain a degree of sympathetic nervous system activation during the night, eating a small breakfast, and crossing the legs when feeling unsteady while standing.

Dr. Kaplan disclosed that he is on the speakers bureaus for Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Merck, Novartis, and Bayer.

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