Hypokalemia Associated With Diuretic Use and Cardiovascular Events in the Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program

Author:

Franse Lonneke V.1,Pahor Marco1,Di Bari Mauro1,Somes Grant W.1,Cushman William C.1,Applegate William B.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Institute for Research in Extramural Medicine, Vrije Universiteit (L.V.F.), Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Sticht Center on Aging, Department of Internal Medicine, Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center (M.P.), Winston Salem, NC; Department of Gerontology and Geriatrics, University of Florence and ‘Careggi’ Hospital (M.D.B.), Florence, Italy; Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Tennessee (G.W.S., W.C.C.), Memphis, Tenn; Veterans Affairs Medical Center (W.C.C.),...

Abstract

Abstract —The treatment of hypertension with high-dose thiazide diuretics results in potassium depletion and a limited benefit for preventing coronary events. The clinical relevance of hypokalemia associated with low-dose diuretics has not been assessed. To determine whether hypokalemia that occurs with low-dose diuretics is associated with a reduced benefit on cardiovascular events, we analyzed data of 4126 participants in the Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program (SHEP), a 5-year randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial of chlorthalidone-based treatment of isolated systolic hypertension in older persons. After 1 year of treatment, 7.2% of the participants randomized to active treatment had a serum potassium <3.5 mmol/L compared with 1% of the participants randomized to placebo ( P <0.001). During the 4 years after the first annual visit, 451 participants experienced a cardiovascular event, 215 experienced a coronary event, 177 experienced stroke, and 323 died. After adjustment for known risk factors and study drug dose, the participants who received active treatment and who experienced hypokalemia had a similar risk of cardiovascular events, coronary events, and stroke as those randomized to placebo. Within the active treatment group, the risk of these events was 51%, 55%, and 72% lower, respectively, among those who had normal serum potassium levels compared with those who experienced hypokalemia ( P <0.05). The participants who had hypokalemia after 1 year of treatment with a low-dose diuretic did not experience the reduction in cardiovascular events achieved among those who did not have hypokalemia.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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