Lewington Sarah, Clarke Robert, Qizilbash Nawab, Peto Richard, Collins Rory
Lancet. 2002 Dec 14;360(9349):1903-13. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(02)11911-8.
The age-specific relevance of blood pressure to cause-specific mortality is best assessed by collaborative meta-analysis of individual participant data from the separate prospective studies.
Information was obtained on each of one million adults with no previous vascular disease recorded at baseline in 61 prospective observational studies of blood pressure and mortality. During 12.7 million person-years at risk, there were about 56000 vascular deaths (12000 stroke, 34000 ischaemic heart disease [IHD], 10000 other vascular) and 66000 other deaths at ages 40-89 years. Meta-analyses, involving "time-dependent" correction for regression dilution, related mortality during each decade of age at death to the estimated usual blood pressure at the start of that decade.
Within each decade of age at death, the proportional difference in the risk of vascular death associated with a given absolute difference in usual blood pressure is about the same down to at least 115 mm Hg usual systolic blood pressure (SBP) and 75 mm Hg usual diastolic blood pressure (DBP), below which there is little evidence. At ages 40-69 years, each difference of 20 mm Hg usual SBP (or, approximately equivalently, 10 mm Hg usual DBP) is associated with more than a twofold difference in the stroke death rate, and with twofold differences in the death rates from IHD and from other vascular causes. All of these proportional differences in vascular mortality are about half as extreme at ages 80-89 years as at ages 40-49 years, but the annual absolute differences in risk are greater in old age. The age-specific associations are similar for men and women, and for cerebral haemorrhage and cerebral ischaemia. For predicting vascular mortality from a single blood pressure measurement, the average of SBP and DBP is slightly more informative than either alone, and pulse pressure is much less informative.
Throughout middle and old age, usual blood pressure is strongly and directly related to vascular (and overall) mortality, without any evidence of a threshold down to at least 115/75 mm Hg.
血压与特定病因死亡率之间的年龄特异性关联,最好通过对来自各项前瞻性研究的个体参与者数据进行协作性荟萃分析来评估。
在61项关于血压与死亡率的前瞻性观察研究中,获取了100万名基线时无既往血管疾病记录的成年人的相关信息。在1270万人年的风险期内,40至89岁人群中有约56000例血管性死亡(12000例中风、34000例缺血性心脏病[IHD]、10000例其他血管疾病)以及66000例其他死亡。荟萃分析采用“时间依赖性”回归稀释校正,将每个死亡年龄十年期间的死亡率与该十年开始时的估计通常血压相关联。
在每个死亡年龄十年内,与通常血压的给定绝对差异相关的血管性死亡风险比例差异,在通常收缩压(SBP)至少降至115 mmHg和通常舒张压(DBP)降至75 mmHg之前大致相同,低于此水平则几乎没有证据。在40至69岁年龄段,通常SBP每相差20 mmHg(或大致相当于通常DBP相差10 mmHg),与中风死亡率相差两倍以上、IHD死亡率和其他血管病因死亡率相差两倍相关。所有这些血管性死亡率的比例差异在80至89岁时约为40至49岁时的一半,但老年时每年的绝对风险差异更大。年龄特异性关联在男性和女性中相似,在脑出血和脑缺血中也相似。对于通过单次血压测量预测血管性死亡率,SBP和DBP的平均值比单独使用任何一个更具信息量,而脉压的信息量则少得多。
在整个中年和老年期,通常血压与血管性(及总体)死亡率密切且直接相关,在至少降至115/75 mmHg之前没有任何阈值证据。