Elevated systolic blood pressure and risk of cardiovascular and renal disease: overview of evidence from observational epidemiologic studies and randomized controlled trials.

The effect of elevated blood pressure on risk of cardiovascular and renal disease has been documented in both observational epidemiologic studies and clinical trials. However, these studies have traditionally concentrated on diastolic blood pressure to characterize the risk associated with hypertension. We reviewed evidence from prospective studies and randomized controlled trials to quantify the risk associated with systolic blood pressure. Prospective studies and randomized controlled clinical trials that were published in English-language journals were retrieved using MEDLINE, bibliographies, and the authors' reference files. All retrieved publications were reviewed and information on sample size, duration, study design, antihypertensive medication, participant characteristics, and outcomes was abstracted for randomized controlled trials that reported systolic blood pressure reduction during intervention. Several prospective studies indicate that the association between systolic blood pressure and risk of coronary heart disease, stroke, and end-stage renal disease is continuous, graded, and independent. Furthermore, they suggest that the association of systolic blood pressure with these outcomes is stronger than that of diastolic blood pressure. Pooling of the data available from randomized controlled trials indicates that an average reduction of 12 to 13 mm Hg in systolic blood pressure over 4 years of follow-up is associated with a 21% reduction in coronary heart disease, 37% reduction in stroke, 25% reduction in total cardiovascular mortality, and 13% reduction in all-cause mortality rates. These data indicate that systolic blood pressure is an independent and strong predictor for risk of cardiovascular and renal disease.

[1]  Effects of treatment on morbidity in hypertension. Results in patients with diastolic blood pressures averaging 115 through 129 mm Hg. , 1967, JAMA.

[2]  P. Whelton,et al.  Blood pressure and end-stage renal disease in men. , 1996, The New England journal of medicine.

[3]  Detection The sixth report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC VI) , 1997 .

[4]  Jeremiah Stamler,et al.  Blood Pressure, Systolic and Diastolic, and Cardiovascular Risks: US Population Data , 1993 .

[5]  Ralph B. D'Agostino,et al.  Blood Pressure as a Risk Factor for Cardiovascular Disease The Framingham Study—30 Years of Follow‐up , 1989, Hypertension.

[6]  J. Cutler,et al.  Controlled Clinical Trials of Drug Treatment for Hypertension A Review , 1989, Hypertension.

[7]  B. Dahlöf,et al.  Morbidity and mortality in the Swedish Trial in Old Patients with Hypertension (STOP-Hypertension) , 1991, The Lancet.

[8]  D. Kromhout Cholesterol, diastolic blood pressure, and stroke: 13 000 strokes in 450 000 people in 45 prospective cohorts , 1995, The Lancet.

[9]  L. Tomás-Abadal,et al.  Coronary risk factors and a 20-year incidence of coronary heart disease and mortality in a Mediterranean industrial population , 1994 .

[10]  D. Reed,et al.  Predictors of sudden cardiac death among Hawaiian-Japanese men. , 1989, American journal of epidemiology.

[11]  G. Boysen,et al.  Influence of systolic and diastolic blood pressure on stroke risk: a prospective observational study. , 1995, American journal of epidemiology.

[12]  J. Miller,et al.  Early predictors of 15-year end-stage renal disease in hypertensive patients. , 1995, Hypertension.

[13]  R. Collins,et al.  Blood pressure, stroke, and coronary heart disease Part 2, short-term reductions in blood pressure: overview of randomised drug trials in their epidemiological context , 1990, The Lancet.

[14]  R. Collins,et al.  Blood pressure, stroke, and coronary heart disease Part 1, prolonged differences in blood pressure: prospective observational studies corrected for the regression dilution bias , 1990, The Lancet.

[15]  Jan A Staessen,et al.  Randomised double-blind comparison of placebo and active treatment for older patients with isolated systolic hypertension , 1997, The Lancet.

[16]  K Hirschhorn,et al.  Letter: Immunotherapy for colorectal cancer. , 1976, Lancet.

[17]  H. Petrovitch,et al.  Isolated systolic hypertension and risk of stroke in Japanese-American men. , 1995, Stroke.

[18]  A. Menotti,et al.  The Prediction of Coronary Heart Disease Mortality as a Function of Major Risk Factors in Over 30000 Men in the Italian RIFLE Pooling Project. A Comparison with the MRFIT Primary Screenees , 1994 .

[19]  G. Dagenais,et al.  Impact of systolic and diastolic blood pressure on ischemic vascular diseases in French-Canadian men from 1974 to 1990. , 1994, The Canadian journal of cardiology.

[20]  I. Holme,et al.  Risk of fatal stroke according to blood pressure level: an 18-year follow-up of the Oslo Study , 1995, Journal of hypertension.

[21]  Jessica A. Mayer,et al.  Recent evidence on drug therapy of mild to moderate hypertension and decreased risk of coronary heart disease. , 1993, Archives of internal medicine.

[22]  T S Warrender,et al.  Randomised trial of treatment of hypertension in elderly patients in primary care. , 1986, British medical journal.

[23]  A. Onat,et al.  Relatively high coronary death and event rates in Turkish women. Relation to three major risk factors in five-year follow-up of cohort. , 1997, International journal of cardiology.

[24]  Smith Wm Treatment of mild hypertension: results of a ten-year intervention trial. , 1977, Circulation research.

[25]  J. Vestbo,et al.  Is diastolic hypertension an independent risk factor for stroke in the presence of normal systolic blood pressure in the middle-aged and elderly? , 1997, American journal of hypertension.

[26]  T. Strasser,et al.  MORTALITY AND MORBIDITY RESULTS FROM THE EUROPEAN WORKING PARTY ON HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE IN THE ELDERLY TRIAL , 1985, The Lancet.

[27]  K. Iseki,et al.  Blood pressure and risk of end-stage renal disease in a screened cohort. , 1996, Kidney international. Supplement.