Rodriguez-Roca Gustavo C, Llisterri-Caro Jose L, Barrios-Alonso Vivencio, Alonso-Moreno Francisco J, Lou-Arnal Salvador, Prieto-Diaz Miguel A, Sanchez-Ruiz Tomas, Dura-Belinchon Rafael, Santos-Rodriguez Jose A, Divison-Garrote Juan A, Gonzalez-Segura Diego, Banegas-Banegas Jose R
Health Care Centre, La Puebla de Montalban, Toledo, Spain.
Blood Press. 2009;18(3):117-25. doi: 10.1080/08037050902982292.
To analyse the cardiovascular risk of a broad sample of hypertensive patients and to examine whether there are differences in blood pressure control and associated factors according to the different cardiovascular risk categories.
A total of 10,520 patients > or = 18 years old were included (mean age 64.6+/-11.3 years; 53.7% women). In this cohort, 3.3% were average risk, 22.6% low added risk, 22.2% moderate added risk, 33.5% high added risk and 18.4% very high added risk. Blood pressure was controlled in 41.4% (95% CI 40.5-42.4) of the total population, in 91.7% of patients with low added risk, in 19.4% with moderate added risk, in 27.4% with high added risk and in 6.8% with very high added risk. Diabetes was the factor most strongly associated with poor blood pressure control in patients with high to very high added risk (OR=7.2; p<0.0001).
More than half of the hypertensive patients treated in primary health care have a high or very high added cardiovascular risk. In these patients, blood pressure control is inadequate and diabetes is associated with a sevenfold increase in the likelihood of poor blood pressure control.