Rouch Laure, Cestac Philippe, Hanon Olivier, Cool Charlène, Helmer Catherine, Bouhanick Béatrice, Chamontin Bernard, Dartigues Jean-Franҫois, Vellas Bruno, Andrieu Sandrine
INSERM 1027, 31073, Toulouse, France,
CNS Drugs. 2015 Feb;29(2):113-30. doi: 10.1007/s40263-015-0230-6.
Chronic hypertension, particularly midlife high blood pressure, has been associated with an increased risk for cognitive decline and dementia. In this context, antihypertensive drugs might have a preventive effect, but the association remains poorly understood.
The aim of this systematic review was to examine all published findings that investigated this relationship and discuss the mechanisms underlying the potential benefits of antihypertensive medication use.
A literature search was conducted using MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane Library for publications from 1990 onwards mentioning hypertension, antihypertensive drugs, cognitive decline, and dementia.
A total of 38 relevant publications, corresponding to 18 longitudinal studies, 11 randomized controlled trials, and nine meta-analyses were identified from the 10,251 articles retrieved in the literature search. In total, 1,346,176 subjects were included in these studies; the average age was 74 years. In the seven longitudinal studies assessing the effect of antihypertensive medication on cognitive impairment or cognitive decline, antihypertensive drugs appeared to be beneficial. Of the 11 longitudinal studies that assessed the effect of antihypertensive medication on incidence of dementia, only three did not find a significant protective effect. Antihypertensive medication could decrease the risk of not only vascular dementia but also Alzheimer's disease. Four randomized controlled trials showed a potentially preventive effect of antihypertensive drugs on the incidence of dementia or cognitive decline: SYST-EUR (Systolic Hypertension in Europe Study) I and II, with a 55% reduction in dementia risk (3.3 vs. 7.4 cases per 1,000 patient years; p<0.001); HOPE (Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation), with a 41% reduction in cognitive decline associated with stroke (95% confidence interval [CI] 6-63); and PROGRESS (Perindopril Protection against Recurrent Stroke Study), with a 19% reduction in cognitive decline (95% CI 4-32; p=0.01). Meta-analyses have sometimes produced conflicting results, but this may be due to methodological considerations. The lack of homogeneity across study designs, patient populations, exposition, outcomes, and duration of follow-up are the most important methodological limitations that might explain the discrepancies between some of these studies.
Antihypertensive drugs, particularly calcium channel blockers and renin-angiotensin system blockers, may be beneficial in preventing cognitive decline and dementia. However, further randomized controlled trials with longer periods of follow-up and cognition as the primary outcome are needed to confirm these findings.
慢性高血压,尤其是中年高血压,与认知功能下降和痴呆风险增加有关。在此背景下,降压药物可能具有预防作用,但这种关联仍未得到充分理解。
本系统评价的目的是审查所有已发表的研究这一关系的结果,并讨论使用降压药物潜在益处的潜在机制。
使用MEDLINE、Embase和Cochrane图书馆对1990年以来提及高血压、降压药物、认知功能下降和痴呆的出版物进行文献检索。
从文献检索中检索到的10251篇文章中,共确定了38篇相关出版物,对应18项纵向研究、11项随机对照试验和9项荟萃分析。这些研究共纳入1346176名受试者;平均年龄为74岁。在评估降压药物对认知障碍或认知功能下降影响的7项纵向研究中,降压药物似乎有益。在评估降压药物对痴呆发病率影响的11项纵向研究中,只有3项未发现显著的保护作用。降压药物不仅可以降低血管性痴呆的风险,还可以降低阿尔茨海默病的风险。四项随机对照试验显示降压药物对痴呆或认知功能下降的发病率具有潜在的预防作用:欧洲收缩期高血压研究(SYST-EUR)I和II,痴呆风险降低55%(每1000患者年3.3例与7.4例;p<0.001);心脏结局预防评估研究(HOPE),与中风相关的认知功能下降降低41%(95%置信区间[CI]6-63);培哚普利预防复发性中风研究(PROGRESS),认知功能下降降低19%(95%CI 4-32;p=0.01)。荟萃分析有时会产生相互矛盾的结果,但这可能是由于方法学考虑。研究设计、患者群体、暴露因素、结局和随访时间缺乏同质性是最重要的方法学局限性,可能解释了其中一些研究之间的差异。
降压药物,尤其是钙通道阻滞剂和肾素-血管紧张素系统阻滞剂,可能有助于预防认知功能下降和痴呆。然而,需要进一步进行以认知为主要结局、随访时间更长的随机对照试验来证实这些发现。