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血壓控制新標準-收縮壓控制低於120mmHg,一項提前終1止的大型臨床試驗警世!
血壓控制新標準-收縮壓控制低於120mmHg
一項提前終1止的大型臨床試驗警世
在人們紀念9-11當天,可能忽略了紐約時報報導的另一則重要新聞,《Lifesaving study points to overhaul in treating high blood pressure》。美國聯邦衛生部門正式宣佈,一項最初由National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)主導,NIH基金參與的大型臨床研究項目Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) 提前終止,因為試驗結果已經非常明確清楚,為了挽救更多人生命,無需等到原定的2017結項時間到來,立刻公佈研究結果。
該研究啟動於2009年,全美有100多個醫療機構,符合研究標準的9300名,年齡50歲以上高血壓患者參與,這是迄今為止美國最大的高血壓臨床研究項目。其目的是為了回答一個醫學界爭議不休,迷惑不解的問題:高血壓患者究竟血壓降多少才算達到正常指標? (How low should blood pressure go?) 簡單概括,該研究將符合試驗要求的9300名病人隨機分為兩組,一組的收縮血壓治療控制標準為低於120mmHg,此組病人平均需要服用三種降血壓藥物。
而另一組則是收縮血壓治療控制指標為低於140 mmHg (傳統標準),他們一般需要服用兩種降壓藥物。試驗到目前為止已經四年,其結果驚人,120毫米汞柱組的中風率比140毫米汞柱組低了30%,而死亡率低了25%。從統計學來說,這個差異非常顯著!這個顯著差異背後的意義就是不能漠視的生命,是一個個鮮活的生命!這個結果出乎意料之外,不就是20毫米汞柱的差異嗎?不就是多服些藥嗎?可這些差異的背後,是疾病發展的病理過程不同,20毫米汞柱的差異可能對全身血管,腦組織,心臟,腎臟等造成不可挽回的嚴重損傷。
大家都知道高血壓是一種慢性病,需要終身服藥來降壓。醫生在給病人設定治療目標時,不僅僅考慮藥品的價格費用,更需要在高血壓病風險和服藥副作用之間尋找一個適當的平衡點,醫生當然希望是用最小劑量最少的藥取得最有效的治療。對高血壓病來說,20毫米汞柱的差異意味著更大的用藥劑量或者更多的藥品。所以,20毫米汞柱治療指標的改變絕對不是一件小事!因此,研究的專家團隊,在經過協力廠商(非研究團隊)專家審核,一致同意提前終止試驗並儘快將結果公佈於世,以挽救在傳統高血壓治療指標下的無數病人生命。
醫學臨床研究因為涉及物件是人,對於研究試驗從設計到執行,通常很嚴格,因種種原因而延長課題時間的比較多見,像這次縮短時間的很罕見。我們不得不對該課題團隊,外審專家和政府有關部門的決定鼓掌稱好,他們尊重事實,以人為本,不教條不打官腔,讓研究成果快速應用到醫療實踐中,讓病人從中儘快獲益。可以預料,此項結果將在醫學界引起震動。不僅對於廣大醫生,而且對於無數高血壓患者來說,現在治療標準和目標必須非常明確:140毫米汞柱不再是高血壓控制目標,為了減少中風和死亡,必須將收縮壓控制在120毫米汞柱之內!再說一遍:高血壓治療指標要比現在的目標更低!降低目前的高血壓治療指標就是在挽救無數人的生命!
Lower Blood Pressure Guidelines Could Be ‘Lifesaving,’
Federal Study Says
By GINA KOLATA
SEPT. 11, 2015
Jackson T. Wright Jr., a blood pressure expert at Case Western Reserve University and University Hospitals Case Medical Center as well as a Sprint study investigator, said changing blood pressure guidelines could cause the falling death rate from heart attacks and stroke to drop even more. CreditDustin Franz for The New York Times
Declaring they had “potentially lifesaving information,” federal health officials said on Friday that they were ending a major study more than a year early because it has already conclusively answered a question cardiologists have puzzled over for decades: How low should blood pressure go?
The answer: way lower than the current guidelines.
For years doctors have been uncertain what the optimal goal should be for patients with high blood pressure. The aim of course is to bring it down, but how far and how aggressively remained a mystery. There are trade-offs — risks and side effects from drugs — and there were lingering questions about whether older patients needed somewhat higher blood pressure to push blood to the brain.
The study found that patients who were assigned to reach a systolic blood pressure goal below 120 — far lower than current guidelines of 140, or 150 for people over 60 — had their risk of heart attacks, heart failure and strokes reduced by a third and their risk of death reduced by nearly a quarter.
The study, called Sprint, randomly assigned more than 9,300 men and women ages 50 and over who were at high risk of heart disease or had kidney disease to of two systolic blood pressure targets: less than 120 millimeters of mercury, which is lower than any guideline ever suggested, or less than 140. (Systolic pressure is the higher of the two blood pressure numbers and represents pressure on blood vessels when the heart contracts.)
The study was expected to conclude in 2017, but considering the results of great importance to public health, the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute announced them Friday morning, saying a paper with the data would be published within a few months.
“This study provides potentially lifesaving information,” Dr. Gary H. Gibbons, director of the institute, said in a statement announcing the decision.
Nearly 79 million adults in this country — one of three — have high blood pressure, and half of those being treated for it still have systolic pressures over 140.
“This study will shake things up,” predicted Dr. J. F Michael Gaziano, a professor of medicine at Harvard who was not involved with the study. He anticipated that it would have the same effect on people’s thinking about blood pressure as studies of about lowering cholesterol levels did when they showed that, contrary to what many had thought, the lower the number the better.
“It is outstanding news,” said Dr. Mark Creager, president of the American Heart Association and director of the Heart and Vascular Center at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, who was not involved in the study. “It will serve as a road map and will save a significant amount of lives.”
If guidelines are changed because of this study — as blood pressure experts expect that they will be — an already falling death rate from heart attacks and stroke could drop even more, said Dr. Jackson T. Wright Jr., a blood pressure expert at Case Western Reserve University and University Hospitals Case Medical Center, and a study investigator. Because cardiovascular disease is still the leading cause of death in the United States, a change in blood pressure goals could also reduce the nation’s overall mortality rate, he said.
The study ventured into unknown territory that some had found a bit frightening. A systolic pressure that is naturally 120 might be good, but it is quite another matter to artificially drag pressure down so low with drugs.
Reaching a target that low would mean giving people more and more medications, and the side effects could cancel any benefit. Older people might be especially vulnerable to ill effects of a much lower blood pressure since many already take an array of drugs for chronic conditions, which might interact. A very low blood pressure could lead to dizziness and falls. Twenty-eight percent of the subjects in the new study were over age 75.
Less than two years ago, a National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute panel went in the opposite direction. People had been told to aim for a systolic blood pressure of 140. But the panel recommended a goal of 150 for people ages 60 and older, arguing that there were no convincing data showing lower is better.
Until now, many blood pressure experts thought they were doing about as well as possible. The incidence of strokes — the major consequence of high blood pressure — has fallen by 70 percent since 1972. The main problem was that so many patients with high blood pressure did not take their medications or took drugs that were not powerful enough.
It was not always easy for people in the study to reach their blood pressure goals. Those assigned to get their pressure below 140 took, on average, two drugs. Those assigned to below 120 took an average of three drugs. Cost usually is not an issue for high blood pressure patients because 90 percent of blood pressure drugs are available as generics.
The study also asked whether a lower blood pressure would help people with kidney disease and whether people would think more clearly and have less dementia. That was one hypothesis, but it also was possible that a lower pressure would mean less blood gets to the brain and kidney, with detrimental effects. The results of a lower blood pressure on the kidneys and the brain are still being analyzed, the heart institute said Friday.
Dr. Suzanne Oparil, a blood pressure expert at the University of Alabama in Birmingham who was co-chairwoman of the heart institute committee that advised higher blood pressure goals, was elated by the results. “The study looks very positive,” she wrote in an email from a vacation cruise. “We’re excited.”
As with all large clinical trials, this one’s accumulating data was periodically examined by a safety and monitoring committee. Such committees keep study results to themselves unless they became so clearly positive or negative that the only ethical thing to do would be to end the trial.
Last month, the committee told administrators at the heart institute that the trial should be stopped. Heart institute administrators and researchers looked at the data and agreed. The next step, before any public announcements, was to notify the study participants. They were told that the study was ended but to stay on their current medications until their next clinic visit or until they saw their health care provider, said David Reboussin, professor of biostatistics at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center and principal investigator for the study’s coordinating center.
Study investigators did not anticipate that the study would so suddenly end after just a few years. “I was very surprised not only by how large the effect was but that it occurred at such a relatively early stage of the study,” said Dr. William C. Cushman, chief of preventive medicine at the V.A. Medical Center in Memphis and a member of the trial leadership committee.
People with high blood pressure should not panic, Dr. Reboussin said. They do not need to rush to their doctors asking to suddenly change medications. High blood pressure takes its toll slowly.
“No one is in imminent danger here,” Dr. Reboussin said.
A version of this article appears in print on September 12, 2015, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: “Study Testing Blood Pressure Says Go Lower”.
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