1. Systolic blood pressure and incident heart failure in the elderly. The Cardiovascular Health Study and the Health, Ageing and Body Composition Study.
- Author
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Butler J, Kalogeropoulos AP, Georgiopoulou VV, Bibbins-Domingo K, Najjar SS, Sutton-Tyrrell KC, Harris TB, Kritchevsky SB, Lloyd-Jones DM, Newman AB, and Psaty BM
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aging physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Body Composition physiology, Epidemiologic Methods, Female, Heart Failure epidemiology, Heart Failure physiopathology, Humans, Hypertension epidemiology, Hypertension physiopathology, Male, Myocardial Infarction epidemiology, Myocardial Infarction etiology, Myocardial Infarction physiopathology, Sex Factors, Stroke epidemiology, Stroke etiology, Stroke physiopathology, Stroke Volume physiology, Heart Failure etiology, Hypertension complications
- Abstract
Background: The exact form of the association between systolic blood pressure (SBP) and heart failure (HF) risk in the elderly remains incompletely defined, especially in individuals not receiving antihypertensive drugs., Objective: To examine the association between SBP and HF risk in the elderly., Design: Competing-risks proportional hazards modelling of incident HF risk, using 10-year follow-up data from two NIH-sponsored cohort studies: the Cardiovascular Health Study (inception: 1989-90 and 1992-3) and the Health ABC Study (inception: 1997-8)., Setting: Community-based cohorts., Participants: 4408 participants (age, 72.8 (4.9) years; 53.1% women, 81.7% white; 18.3% black) without prevalent HF and not receiving antihypertensive drugs at baseline., Main Outcome Measures: Incident HF, defined as first adjudicated hospitalisation for HF., Results: Over 10 years, 493 (11.2%) participants developed HF. Prehypertension (120-139 mm Hg), stage 1 (140-159 mm Hg), and stage 2 (≥160 mm Hg) hypertension were associated with escalating HF risk; HRs versus optimal SBP (<120 mm Hg) in competing-risks models controlling for clinical characteristics were 1.63 (95% CI 1.23 to 2.16; p=0.001), 2.21 (95% CI 1.65 to 2.96; p<0.001) and 2.60 (95% CI 1.85 to 3.64; p<0.001), respectively. Overall 255/493 (51.7%) HF events occurred in participants with SBP <140 mm Hg at baseline. Increasing SBP was associated with higher HF risk in women than in men; no race-SBP interaction was seen. In analyses with continuous SBP, HF risk had a continuous positive association with SBP to levels as low as 113 mm Hg in men and 112 mm Hg in women., Conclusions: There is a continuous positive association between SBP and HF risk in the elderly for levels of SBP as low as <115 mm Hg; over half of incident HF events occur in individuals with SBP <140 mm Hg.
- Published
- 2011
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