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1-Year outcomes of hypertension management in 13,000 outpatients under practice conditions: Prospective 3A registry

Item Type:Article
Title:1-Year outcomes of hypertension management in 13,000 outpatients under practice conditions: Prospective 3A registry
Creators Name:Zeymer, U. and Dechend, R. and Riemer, T. and Kaiser, E. and Senges, J. and Pittrow, D. and Schmieder, R.E.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: Current data on characteristics and outcomes of patients with high blood pressure (BP) managed under clinical practice conditions are limited. METHODS AND RESULTS: The 3A registry is an open, prospective observational cohort study in German primary care offices, with a 4:1:1 inclusion ratio to either aliskiren (ALIS), an ACE inhibitor/angiotensin receptor blocker (ACEI/ARB), or to an antihypertensive agent not affecting the renin angiotensin system (non-RAS). A nonlinear mixed regression model was used to assess BP changes during follow-up regarding different BP values at inclusion in the various groups. ClinicalTrial.gov identifier is NCT01454583. In the total cohort of 13,433 patients with 1-year follow-up results, the mean age of patients was 64.7years, 54% were men. Mean number of antihypertensive drugs was higher in the ALIS group compared to the other groups (3.0 drugs versus 2.5 in ACEI/ARB versus 1.6 in non-RAS; p<0.0001). Statistical regression analysis revealed baseline BP as the dominant covariate. After adjustment for baseline BP and 12 other confounders, no significant differences in BP reduction between the three groups were observed. The rate of major cardiac events (death, myocardial infarction, and stroke) was 1.3% in the total cohort, and did not differ across groups. CONCLUSIONS: ALIS at beginning of the observation was mostly used by the physicians in patients with higher BP at entry and in higher risk populations. By study end, in all groups, stringent BP lowering measures, usually with combination therapy, led to significant improvements; more than half of these at-risk patients reached the BP targets.
Keywords:Essential Hypertension, Renin Angiotensin System, Clinical Practice, Management, Control Rates, Outcomes, Effectiveness, Long-Term
Source:International Journal of Cardiology
ISSN:0167-5273
Publisher:Elsevier
Volume:176
Number:3
Page Range:589-594
Date:20 October 2014
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2014.07.089
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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