University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Greenville, Care Coordination Institute, P.O. Box 367, Greenville, SC 29602.
Hypertension. 2013 Oct;62(4):691-7. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.113.01448. Epub 2013 Aug 5.
Hypertensive patients with clinical blood pressure (BP) uncontrolled on ≥3 antihypertensive medications (ie, apparent treatment-resistant hypertension [aTRH]) comprise ≈28% to 30% of all uncontrolled patients in the United States. However, the proportion receiving these medications in optimal doses is unknown; aTRH is used because treatment adherence and measurement artifacts were not available in electronic record data from our >200 community-based clinics Outpatient Quality Improvement Network. This study sought to define the proportion of uncontrolled hypertensives with aTRH on optimal regimens and clinical factors associated with optimal therapy. During 2007-2010, 468 877 hypertensive patients met inclusion criteria. BP <140/<90 mm Hg defined control. Multivariable logistic regression was used to assess variables independently associated with optimal therapy (prescription of diuretic and ≥2 other BP medications at ≥50% of maximum recommended hypertension doses). Among 468 877 hypertensives, 147 635 (31.5%) were uncontrolled; among uncontrolled hypertensives, 44 684 were prescribed ≥3 BP medications (30.3%), of whom 22 189 (15.0%) were prescribed optimal therapy. Clinical factors independently associated with optimal BP therapy included black race (odds ratio, 1.40 [95% confidence interval, 1.32-1.49]), chronic kidney disease (1.31 [1.25-1.38]), diabetes mellitus (1.30 [1.24-1.37]), and coronary heart disease risk equivalent status (1.29 [1.14-1.46]). Clinicians more often prescribe optimal therapy for aTRH when cardiovascular risk is greater and treatment goals lower. Approximately 1 in 7 of all uncontrolled hypertensives and 1 in 2 with uncontrolled aTRH are prescribed ≥3 BP medications in optimal regimens. Prescribing more optimal pharmacotherapy for uncontrolled hypertensives including aTRH, confirmed with out-of-office BP, could improve hypertension control.
高血压患者的临床血压(BP)控制不佳,服用≥3 种降压药物(即明显治疗抵抗性高血压[aTRH]),约占美国所有未控制患者的 28%至 30%。然而,尚不清楚这些药物的最佳剂量是否得到了应用;由于我们的 200 多家社区诊所门诊质量改进网络中的电子记录数据中未提供治疗依从性和测量异常,因此使用了 aTRH。这项研究旨在确定最佳方案中接受 aTRH 治疗的未控制高血压患者的比例,以及与最佳治疗相关的临床因素。2007-2010 年期间,468877 名高血压患者符合纳入标准。BP<140/<90mmHg 定义为控制良好。多变量逻辑回归用于评估与最佳治疗独立相关的变量(利尿剂和≥2 种其他 BP 药物处方,剂量为最大推荐高血压剂量的 50%以上)。在 468877 名高血压患者中,147635 名(31.5%)血压未得到控制;在未得到控制的高血压患者中,44684 名患者服用≥3 种 BP 药物(30.3%),其中 22189 名(15.0%)患者服用了最佳治疗方案。与最佳 BP 治疗独立相关的临床因素包括黑人种族(比值比,1.40[95%置信区间,1.32-1.49])、慢性肾脏病(1.31[1.25-1.38])、糖尿病(1.30[1.24-1.37])和冠心病风险等效状态(1.29[1.14-1.46])。当心血管风险更高且治疗目标更低时,临床医生更常为 aTRH 开具最佳治疗方案。大约每 7 名未控制的高血压患者中就有 1 名,每 2 名未控制的 aTRH 患者中就有 1 名服用了最佳方案中的≥3 种 BP 药物。为包括 aTRH 在内的未控制高血压患者开具更多的最佳药物治疗方案,并通过诊室外血压进行确认,可能会改善高血压控制情况。