Blood Pressure Reduction and Secondary Stroke Prevention

Author:

Katsanos Aristeidis H.1,Filippatou Angeliki1,Manios Efstathios1,Deftereos Spyridon1,Parissis John1,Frogoudaki Alexandra1,Vrettou Agathi-Rosa1,Ikonomidis Ignatios1,Pikilidou Maria1,Kargiotis Odysseas1,Voumvourakis Konstantinos1,Alexandrov Anne W.1,Alexandrov Andrei V.1,Tsivgoulis Georgios1

Affiliation:

1. From the Second Department of Neurology (A.H.K., A.F., K.V., G.T.) and Second Department of Cardiology (S.D., J.P., A.F., A.-R.V., I.I.), Attikon University Hospital, School of Medicine, University of Athens, Greece; Department of Neurology, University of Ioannina School of Medicine, Greece (A.H.K.); Department of Clinical Therapeutics, Alexandra Hospital, School of Medicine, University of Athens, Greece (E.M.); First Department of Internal Medicine, Hypertension Excellence Center, AHEPA University...

Abstract

Current recommendations do not specifically address the optimal blood pressure (BP) reduction for secondary stroke prevention in patients with previous cerebrovascular events. We conducted a systematic review and metaregression analysis on the association of BP reduction with recurrent stroke and cardiovascular events using data from randomized controlled clinical trials of secondary stroke prevention. For all reported events during each eligible study period, we calculated the corresponding risk ratios to express the comparison of event occurrence risk between patients randomized to antihypertensive treatment and those randomized to placebo. On the basis of the reported BP values, we performed univariate metaregression analyses according to the achieved BP values under the random-effects model (Method of Moments) for those adverse events reported in ≥10 total subgroups of included randomized controlled clinical trials. In pairwise meta-analyses, antihypertensive treatment lowered the risk for recurrent stroke (risk ratio, 0.73; 95% confidence interval, 0.62–0.87; P <0.001), disabling or fatal stroke (risk ratio, 0.71; 95% confidence interval, 0.59–0.85; P <0.001), and cardiovascular death (risk ratio, 0.85; 95% confidence interval, 0.75–0.96; P =0.01). In metaregression analyses, systolic BP reduction was linearly related to the lower risk of recurrent stroke ( P =0.049), myocardial infarction ( P =0.024), death from any cause ( P =0.001), and cardiovascular death ( P <0.001). Similarly, diastolic BP reduction was linearly related to a lower risk of recurrent stroke ( P =0.026) and all-cause mortality ( P =0.009). Funnel plot inspection and Egger statistical test revealed no evidence of publication bias. The extent of BP reduction is linearly associated with the magnitude of risk reduction in recurrent cerebrovascular and cardiovascular events. Strict and aggressive BP control seems to be essential for effective secondary stroke prevention.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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