Lee Woojung, Gray Shelly L, Barthold Douglas, Crane Paul K, Larson Eric B, Marcum Zachary A
School of Pharmacy, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98104, USA.
Patient Prefer Adherence. 2019 Oct 23;13:1809-1815. doi: 10.2147/PPA.S216088. eCollection 2019.
Antihypertensives may have effects on the brain beyond blood pressure lowering. Ongoing clinical trials aim to evaluate the effectiveness of approved antihypertensives in preventing dementia, including patients with and without hypertension. In order for a dementia prevention strategy using antihypertensives to be effective, it is critical to understand patient concerns about this strategy in both users and non-users of antihypertensives. Thus, this study examined the association between current use of antihypertensive and having concerns about using an antihypertensive as a dementia prevention strategy, as well as sociodemographic factors associated with concerns.
Cross-sectional, self-administered, web-based survey was conducted among 1661 patients in a large health system in January 2018. Participants reported whether they were currently taking an antihypertensive (yes/no), and what types of hypothetical concerns they have about the idea of taking an antihypertensive to prevent dementia (yes/no, for each of 7 concerns). Associations between the two variables were assessed via logistic regression, and odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals were calculated.
Most respondents were female (77%), 51-70 years of age (64%), and white (89%), with 30% reporting current antihypertensive use. Compared to current users, non-users were more likely to report the five following concerns: side effects from the medication, hassle to take medications, lack of evidence, not wanting to use medications, and already having normal/low blood pressure. Non-users were also less likely to report having no concerns (adjusted OR = 0.3; 95% CI = 0.2-0.4) compared to current users. Younger age and lower income were associated with having more concerns.
Patients not currently using an antihypertensive are more likely to have concerns about using an antihypertensive for dementia prevention, compared to current antihypertensive users. Patient perspectives are important to consider for the implementation of dementia prevention strategies.
抗高血压药物可能对大脑产生除降低血压之外的影响。正在进行的临床试验旨在评估已获批的抗高血压药物在预防痴呆症方面的有效性,包括患有和未患有高血压的患者。为了使使用抗高血压药物预防痴呆症的策略有效,了解抗高血压药物使用者和非使用者对该策略的担忧至关重要。因此,本研究调查了当前使用抗高血压药物与对使用抗高血压药物作为痴呆症预防策略的担忧之间的关联,以及与这些担忧相关的社会人口学因素。
2018年1月,在一个大型医疗系统的1661名患者中进行了一项横断面、基于网络的自我管理调查。参与者报告他们目前是否正在服用抗高血压药物(是/否),以及他们对服用抗高血压药物预防痴呆症这一想法存在哪些假设性担忧(是/否,针对7种担忧中的每一种)。通过逻辑回归评估这两个变量之间的关联,并计算95%置信区间的比值比。
大多数受访者为女性(77%),年龄在51 - 70岁之间(64%),白人(89%),30%报告目前正在使用抗高血压药物。与当前使用者相比,非使用者更有可能报告以下五种担忧:药物副作用、服药麻烦、缺乏证据、不想使用药物以及血压已正常/偏低。与当前使用者相比,非使用者也不太可能报告没有担忧(调整后的比值比 = 0.3;95%置信区间 = 0.2 - 0.4)。年龄较小和收入较低与更多担忧相关。
与当前使用抗高血压药物的患者相比,目前未使用抗高血压药物的患者更有可能对使用抗高血压药物预防痴呆症存在担忧。在实施痴呆症预防策略时,患者的观点很重要,值得考虑。