Portegies Marileen L P, Mirza Saira Saeed, Verlinden Vincentius J A, Hofman Albert, Koudstaal Peter J, Swanson Sonja A, Ikram M Arfan
From the Departments of Epidemiology (M.L.P.P., S.S.M., V.J.A.V., A.H., S.A.S., M.A.I.), Neurology (M.L.P.P., P.J.K., M.A.I.), and Radiology (M.A.I.), Erasmus MC University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; and Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA (A.H.).
Hypertension. 2016 Jun;67(6):1126-32. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.116.07098.
Hypertension is a major modifiable risk factor for stroke. Associations of blood pressure with incident stroke are mostly based on single or average blood pressure levels. However, this approach does not take into account long-term trajectories of blood pressure, which can vary considerably in the elderly. Within the population-based Rotterdam Study, we examined trajectories of systolic blood pressure in 6745 participants (60.0% women) over an age-range from 55 to 106 years and jointly modeled their risk of stroke and competing causes of death using joint latent class mixed modeling. Four trajectories were identified. Class 1 was characterized by blood pressure increasing gradually from on average 120 to 160 mm Hg over 5 decades (n=4938). Compared with this class, class 2, characterized by a similar midlife blood pressure, but a steep increase (n=822, increasing from 120 to 200 mm Hg), and class 4, characterized by a high midlife blood pressure (n=115; average 160 mm Hg) and had a higher risk of stroke and death. Class 3, characterized by a moderate midlife blood pressure (n=870; average 140 mm Hg), had a similar risk of death as class 1, but the highest risk of stroke. Assessing trajectories of blood pressure provides a more nuanced understanding of the associations between blood pressure, stroke, and mortality. In particular, high blood pressure and rapidly increasing blood pressure patterns are associated with a high risk of stroke and death, whereas moderately high blood pressure is only related to an increased risk of stroke. Future studies should explore the potential pathogenic significance of these patterns.
高血压是中风的一个主要可改变风险因素。血压与中风发病的关联大多基于单次或平均血压水平。然而,这种方法没有考虑到血压的长期变化轨迹,而老年人的血压变化轨迹差异可能很大。在基于人群的鹿特丹研究中,我们研究了6745名参与者(60.0%为女性)在55至106岁年龄段的收缩压变化轨迹,并使用联合潜在类别混合模型对他们的中风风险和其他死因进行了联合建模。识别出了四种轨迹。第1类的特点是血压在50年里从平均120毫米汞柱逐渐升至160毫米汞柱(n = 4938)。与该类别相比,第2类的中年血压相似,但上升陡峭(n = 822,从120毫米汞柱升至200毫米汞柱),第4类的中年血压较高(n = 115;平均160毫米汞柱),中风和死亡风险更高。第3类的特点是中年血压适中(n = 870;平均140毫米汞柱),死亡风险与第1类相似,但中风风险最高。评估血压变化轨迹能更细致地理解血压、中风和死亡率之间的关联。特别是,高血压和血压快速上升模式与中风和死亡的高风险相关,而中度高血压仅与中风风险增加有关。未来的研究应探索这些模式潜在的致病意义。