Hypertension is a powerful risk factor for fatal and nonfatal cardiovascular
disease events. Data from observational studies indicate that this risk is
continuous, without evidence of a threshold, down to blood pressures as low
as 115/75 mm Hg.1 Randomized
controlled trials have convincingly shown that treatment of hypertension
reduces the risk of stroke, coronary heart disease, congestive heart failure,
and mortality.2,3 Because hypertension
currently affects 1 in 4 American adults ([almost equal to]65 million people
in 1999 to 2000)4 and may affect >90%
of individuals during their lifetimes,5
adequate control of blood pressure is of enormous public health importance.
However, recent studies indicate that as many as two thirds of those with
hypertension in the United States are either untreated or undertreated.6
Studies based on national data and community cohorts have shed light on the
reasons underlying this poor control, but several questions remain
unanswered. In this article, we review contemporary data on the epidemiology
of uncontrolled hypertension in the United States by (1) defining what
constitutes “controlled hypertension”; (2) describing the current magnitude
of the problem, including temporal trends; (3) summarizing the public health
consequences of uncontrolled hypertension; (4) examining the clinical
correlates of uncontrolled hypertension and appraising the patient- and
physician-related factors related to poor control of blood pressure; and (5)
identifying future research directions, including potential interventions to
address this problem. In this article, “uncontrolled hypertension” signifies
blood pressure that is inadequately treated rather than blood pressure that
is resistant to treatment, as might be observed with secondary causes of
hypertension such as renal artery stenosis.
Definition: What Is Optimal Blood
Pressure Control?
The
definition of high blood pressure has changed over time and differs between
guidelines proposed by expert bodies. Variation in the definition of
hypertension influences the number of people classified as having
uncontrolled hypertension 7 and may
contribute to uncertainty among clinicians (Table
1).8 The 1977 report of the Joint
National Committee on the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment
of High Blood Pressure (JNC) regarded a blood pressure >=160/95 mm Hg as
elevated, although treatment recommendations were based primarily on the
diastolic blood pressure.9 The 1980
JNC report defined hypertension based on a diastolic blood pressure
threshold alone (90 mm Hg).10 In 1984,
this definition was changed again, to a blood pressure >=140/90 mm Hg.11
In JNC VI (1997), a lower threshold of 130/85 mm Hg was recommended for
individuals with diabetes mellitus.12
JNC VII lowered this target for individuals with diabetes or chronic kidney
disease, to 130/80 mm Hg,3 bringing
this threshold in agreement with recommendations of the American Diabetes
Association and the National Kidney Foundation.13,14
However, the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA), an
organization that issues periodic “report cards” for managed care
organizations, continues to use a cut point of 140/90 mm Hg in both diabetic
and nondiabetic patients.15
|
TABLE 1.
Definitions of Blood Pressure Control |
Individuals with evidence of target organ damage such as left ventricular
hypertrophy or who have experienced clinical sequelae such as heart failure
are at particularly high risk of cardiovascular events, and use of lower
blood pressure thresholds for these individuals was endorsed by JNC VI.12
The European Society of Hypertension/European Society of Cardiology
guidelines also recommend that treatment thresholds account for baseline
cardiovascular risk,16 similar to the
approach based on absolute risk contained in the National Cholesterol
Education Program (NCEP) guidelines.17
However, in an effort to simplify treatment guidelines, the JNC VII report
recommends use of an alternate blood pressure threshold only for patients
with diabetes or chronic kidney disease.3
Data
on the prevalence of controlled and uncontrolled hypertension are available
from national cross-sectional surveys, epidemiological investigations,
community studies, health maintenance organizations, and reports of
physician office practices
|
TABLE 2.
Hypertension Control in the United States: Selected Studies Published
Since 1990 |
|
TABLE 2.
Continued |
Prevalence of Uncontrolled Hypertension in
National Surveys
The
most comprehensive information concerning the prevalence of uncontrolled
hypertension in the United States derives from population-based surveys
conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics.43
Based on data collected in the 1999 to 2000 National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES), the estimated overall prevalence of
hypertension in 2000 was 28.7%.6 Among
1565 participants with hypertension, 68.9% were aware of the problem, and
58.4% were under pharmacological treatment. Overall, only 31.0% of
individuals had hypertension controlled to a blood pressure of <140 mm Hg
systolic and 90 mm Hg diastolic. This figures implies that >40 million
adults have uncontrolled hypertension in the United States.
The
Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS) is a tool used by
American health plans to track quality of care.15
Summary data from HEDIS are published yearly by the NCQA. In the 2003 report,
blood pressure control rates for adults 46 to 85 years of age ranged from
58.6% for Medicaid to 62.2% for commercial plans. The HEDIS data are less
representative than those of NHANES because they are restricted to insured
patients enrolled in health plans that voluntarily report their performance.
Prevalence of Uncontrolled Hypertension in
Epidemiological Studies and Other Samples
Other
studies of hypertension control have been performed in a variety of
epidemiological and practice settings (Table
2). In the predominantly white Framingham Heart Study cohort between
1990 and 1995, 29% of hypertensive participants were controlled.20
Higher rates of control were observed in 2 multiethnic epidemiological
cohorts, the Cardiovascular Health Study and the Atherosclerosis Risk in
Communities Study, although approximately half were still suboptimally
treated.19,22 Control rates of 30% to
50% have been reported in recent studies of patients in ambulatory care
practices.32,33,35–37,39–42,44
Prevalence of Uncontrolled Hypertension
in High-Risk Groups
Despite the recognition that diabetic persons are at especially high risk of
cardiovascular disease,3,45 studies
suggest that hypertension is as poorly controlled in diabetic persons as it
in nondiabetics. In NHANES III (1988 to 1994), the proportion of
hypertensive, diabetic individuals with adequate blood pressure control
(<140/90 mm Hg) was 31%, similar to that in the overall sample.46
Only 12% had hypertension controlled using the 1997 JNC VI definition
(<130/85 mm Hg). The overall prevalence of hypertension among diabetic
individuals in NHANES III was high, 71% using the JNC VI definition.46
Similar rates of hypertension in diabetic persons have been reported in
other studies from a variety of practice settings.42,47,48
The proportion of diabetic, hypertensive patients treated and controlled in
recent studies has been 20% to 25% using contemporary blood pressure
criteria.32,40,42,48,49
Chronic kidney disease represents another comorbidity associated with both
difficult blood pressure control and high cardiovascular risk. Coresh et al
50 found that only 27% of
hypertensive individuals with elevated serum creatinine in NHANES III had
blood pressure <140/90 mm Hg. Only 11% had blood pressure controlled to
<130/85 mm Hg. In a cohort of patients with end-stage renal disease on
dialysis, the prevalence of hypertension was nearly 90%, and only 30% had
blood pressure controlled to <=150/85 mm Hg.51
Individuals with established coronary heart disease make up another high-risk
group in which aggressive control of blood pressure may be warranted.3
Recent data suggest that antihypertensive therapy may slow the progression
of coronary heart disease even for individuals with baseline blood pressures
<140/90 mm Hg.52 However, there are
relatively few data on the prevalence of hypertension and rates of control
among individuals with coronary heart disease. One study of hypertensive
patients attending internal medicine clinics noted that blood pressure was
treated and controlled (<140/90 mm Hg) in [almost equal to]40% of those with
coronary artery disease.40 Another
study of coronary heart disease patients at Veterans Administration
hospitals found that <40% had blood pressures of <=130/85 mm Hg.53
Temporal Trends in Hypertension Control
Trends observed in NHANES and National Health Examination Survey data since
1960 are displayed in the Figure. The
largest increases in awareness, treatment, and control occurred between the
1976 to 1980 and 1988 to 1991 surveys. Although statistically significant
increases in treatment and control have occurred since 1988, the rate of
rise has been modest. Based on the most recent NHANES data, it appears that
the goal of having 50% of hypertensive adults treated and controlled will
not be reached by 2010, the target set by public health authorities.15,54–56
|
Figure. Trends in awareness,
treatment, and control of hypertension in the United States, 1960 to
2000. Data are weighted using sampling weights as described previously.6,7,65
Denominator for all percentages (y axis) is hypertensive persons.
Definition of blood pressure control is <160/95 mm Hg for National
Health Examination Survey (NHES), NHANES I, and NHANES II and <140/90 mm
Hg for NHANES III and NHANES 1999 to 2000. Adapted from Burt et al
7 with permission of the American
Heart Association. |
Data
from several other sources support the finding of increased control in the
past several decades. In the Cardiovascular Health Study cohort, control
among hypertensives increased from 37% to 49% between 1989 and 1999.22
Hypertension control rates in a Veterans Affairs study increased from 31% in
1990 to 1995 to 43% in 1999.32 A more recent
time period is covered by the HEDIS/NCQA report, which noted an increase of
10 to 15 percentage points in control rates among the participating health
plans that reported their data between 2000 and 2003.15
Caveats to Be Considered When
Interpreting Data on Hypertension Control Rates
A
number of factors contribute to the variation in hypertension control rates
reported in existing studies (Table 2).
Most noticeably, these studies are based on different patient populations,
ranging from the nationally representative NHANES database to several inner-city
samples. Whereas population-based data enable an assessment of national
rates of hypertension control, the reasons for poor control are
heterogeneous and may be easier to examine in more narrowly defined patient
samples. Secular trends in blood pressure definitions and hypertension
control rates may also contribute to variability between studies. For
instance, inevitable lags in the dissemination of guidelines may affect
measures of adherence after a guideline change.
Several methodological issues also warrant consideration. In NHANES and most
epidemiological studies, the definition of hypertension is based on the
blood pressure recorded at the study examination and the use of
antihypertensive medications. Failure to account for use of
nonpharmacological therapies may misclassify some individuals as
nonhypertensive when they are in fact treated and controlled,6,39
resulting in an underestimation of hypertension control rates. In contrast,
several studies, including the NCQA report, rely on
International Classification of Disease,
ninth revision, diagnoses of hypertension or diagnoses contained in the
medical record,15,39 an approach that
may inflate estimates of hypertension control for 2 reasons. Patients with
elevated blood pressure who do not carry the diagnosis of hypertension may
be misclassified as nonhypertensive.15,39
Conversely, some patients with a remote chart diagnosis of hypertension who
neither require therapy nor have elevated blood pressure would be considered
controlled in these studies.
Within-person variability in blood pressure introduces another potential
source of misclassification of hypertension status that may result in an
overestimation of uncontrolled hypertension.57
Multiple blood pressure measurements, particularly on separate occasions,
may reduce this risk. In NHANES III, nearly 80% of participants had up to 6
blood pressure measurements on 2 occasions.43
A single examination was performed for the most recent NHANES, but >90% of
participants had 3 blood pressure measurements at this visit.6
Although other studies have relied predominantly on 1 or 2 measurements,
investigators from the Rochester Epidemiology Project found that
hypertension rates were similar whether a single measurement or the average
of 6 measurements on 2 occasions was used.21
Similarly, Alexander and colleagues 33
found that use of a single clinic blood pressure yielded estimates of
hypertension control comparable to those based on multiple blood pressures,
except when the definition of control required >75% of blood pressures to be
<140/90 mm Hg.
Although taking the blood pressure multiple times can attenuate the
influence of within-person variability because of physiological variation or
measurement error, several sources of nonrandom variation may also exist.
The most important of these is the phenomenon of “white-coat hypertension,”
which may lead to an overestimation of hypertension prevalence.58
Assessment of ambulatory blood pressures may provide a better index of
control, although such measures are rarely available in epidemiological
settings. Another consideration is end-digit preference, the tendency to
round blood pressures to the closest 5 or 10 mm Hg. Green and colleagues
59 noted that a minor change in the
definition of blood pressure control, from <140/90 to <=140/90 mm Hg,
produced a substantial increase in the proportion of patients controlled in
a clinic sample. This observation is relevant because HEDIS changed its
definition of hypertension control from <140/90 to <=140/90 mm Hg in 2000,
whereas JNC and NHANES have stayed with the more stringent definition of
<140/90 mm Hg.3,6,48
These
issues notwithstanding, most studies suggest that more than half of those
with hypertension in this country have inadequate blood pressure control.
National gains in control rates have been modest in the last decade,
suggesting that a substantial missed opportunity continues to exist for the
prevention of cardiovascular disease in this country.
Public Health Implications of
Uncontrolled Hypertension
The
high prevalence of uncontrolled hypertension suggests that a substantial
number of cardiovascular events could be prevented by improved blood
pressure control. The most recent NHANES data indicate that slightly more
than half of the individuals with uncontrolled hypertension are not on any
antihypertensive medications.6 The
benefits of pharmacological treatment for these patients are well
established. Meta-analyses of randomized placebo-controlled trials indicate
that antihypertensive therapy reduces the risk of stroke by [almost equal to]30%,
coronary heart disease by 10% to 20%, congestive heart failure by 40% to
50%, and total mortality by 10%.2
Estimating the benefits of improved blood pressure control for patients
already on therapy is more difficult because few trials evaluating different
blood pressure targets have been performed. Also, it remains controversial
whether the risk of cardiovascular events is related solely to the blood
pressure achieved or also to the manner in which it is achieved. Nonetheless,
blood pressure control rates in randomized trials are typically quite high,60
suggesting that improved control rates would be necessary for the benefits
of antihypertensive treatment to be demonstrated in randomized trials.
Several studies have attempted to quantify the societal cost of uncontrolled
hypertension in clinical and financial terms. Using NHANES III data, Wong
and colleagues 61 estimated that
control of hypertension to levels recommended by the JNC could prevent 19%
to 56% of coronary heart disease events in men and 31% to 57% of coronary
heart disease events in women, depending on the blood pressure achieved. The
NCQA estimates that 15 000 to 26 000 deaths could be averted annually if
everyone received the same care as that delivered in the top 10th percentile
of health plans.15 Flack and
colleagues 62 estimate that the
direct medical expenditures attributable to inadequate blood pressure
control is nearly $1 billion per year. These costs do not include the
workforce burdens imposed by excess sick days
15 and increased numbers of physician
office visits.63
Factors Associated With Inadequate Blood
Pressure Control
Studies spanning several decades have identified myriad factors related to
poor blood pressure control. These factors can be divided, somewhat
arbitrarily, into patient-related factors and physician-related factors (Table
3). Patient-related factors include access to health care, compliance,
and comorbidities. Physician-related factors include knowledge base,
perceptions about the care delivered, and practice patterns. Earlier reports
and guidelines relating to uncontrolled hypertension emphasized patient-related
factors, particularly those having to do with access to care and compliance.
However, recent data indicate that physician practices are at least as
responsible for this problem, if not more so.31,64
In the following section, we initially summarize patient-related factors and
then discuss physician-related factors that contribute to the burden of
uncontrolled hypertension in the community.
|
TABLE 3.
Causes of Uncontrolled Hypertension |
Clinical Correlates: Age and Sex
Various patient characteristics have been associated with uncontrolled
hypertension, including age,20,33,39,65
obesity,20 and lack of exercise.66
These characteristics are risk factors for hypertension itself and
presumably contribute directly to difficult blood pressure control. Hyman
and Pavlik 65 cited advanced age as
the most important correlate of uncontrolled hypertension, accounting for an
estimated 32% of cases among those aware of this condition in NHANES III.
Age is most strongly related to systolic blood pressure,43
and isolated systolic hypertension accounts for the vast majority of cases
of uncontrolled hypertension in individuals >60 years of age.67
Data
on the association of gender with hypertension control have been conflicting.
In NHANES III (1988–1994), rates of awareness and control among
hypertensives were significantly higher in women compared with men.6,43
These differences persisted even after adjustment for age and other
demographic characteristics.65
However, in the 1999 to 2000 NHANES, there was no significant difference
between men and women as a result of significant increases in treatment and
control rates in men.6 Several studies
of ambulatory practices 29,33,39 have
found female gender to be a significant predictor of blood pressure control
in multivariable models, but other studies have reported either no
difference 37 or better control in
men.40,41
Race
is related in a complex manner to hypertension control because it may
interact with multiple other factors, including access to care,
susceptibility to hypertension, and comorbid conditions such as obesity. In
the 1999 to 2000 NHANES, rates of control were lower in Mexican Americans
(17.7%) compared with non-Hispanic whites (33.4%) and non-Hispanic blacks
(28.1%).6 The difference between
Mexican Americans and non-Hispanic whites was statistically significant in
all age and gender subgroups, although the comparisons did not account for
other sociodemographic characteristics. Low rates of hypertension treatment
or control in Hispanic individuals have also been reported in other studies.40,68–70
Data on blood pressure control in blacks have been inconclusive, with some
studies 65,68 but not others
22,31,37 suggesting that blacks have
poorer blood pressure control than whites after multivariable adjustment.
Among blacks, additional factors such as immigrant status
71 and geographic region
71 correlate with poor blood pressure
control, suggesting that cultural or sociodemographic characteristics may
contribute to observed differences between racial groups.
Access to Health Care and Socioeconomic
Status
Studies based on NHANES data 65 and
clinical databases 29,31 have helped
to change the perception that patients with uncontrolled hypertension are
typically uninsured or have restricted access to health care.26,72,73
In fact, 92% of participants with uncontrolled hypertension in NHANES III
had health insurance, and 86% reported a regular source of care.65
Individuals in this latter group made an average of 4.3 visits to physicians
per year.65 In another study,
Berlowitz et al 31 examined 800
hypertensive men who received regular medical care (average of 6.4
hypertension-related visits per year) at Veterans Administration hospitals
and found that <25% had adequate blood pressure control.
Whereas these data suggest that access to health care and socioeconomic
status are not the predominant causes of uncontrolled hypertension
nationally, they do not negate the importance of these factors for some
patients. For instance, in NHANES III, private insurance (versus no
insurance) and a regular healthcare provider were multivariable predictors
of hypertension control, despite the fact that most individuals with
uncontrolled hypertension reported having both.66
Similarly, in a study of >15 000 hypertension-related clinic visits to
community practices, self-pay or free-care status was associated with a
lower likelihood of blood pressure control in multivariable models.40
Studies in inner-city and minority populations have also emphasized the
contribution of inadequate health insurance and lower socioeconomic status
to inadequate blood pressure control.26–28,72,74,75
Patient noncompliance may contribute to poor blood pressure control,76
although the importance of this factor at a community level is difficult to
assess. Although concerns about patient compliance are infrequently cited by
physicians as a reason for not starting or escalating hypertensive therapy,64
pill-counting studies suggest that medication compliance is overestimated by
patients, indicating that self-report is an unreliable way to assess
adherence to therapies.77 Several
older studies suggest an association between compliance and blood pressure
control.78–80 Reasons for poor
compliance may include insufficient patient knowledge, inaccurate
perceptions, medication cost, and side effects of therapy.81–84
In 1 national telephone survey, 68% of respondents indicated that
hypertension was not “a serious health concern,” and nearly half did not
know their blood pressure despite the fact that the vast majority had a
measurement within 4 months of the survey.81
Physician-Related Factors
Several studies have scrutinized the role of physicians in promoting poor
blood pressure control. In the study of Berlowitz and colleagues,31
physicians caring for patients in Veterans Administration hospitals
escalated antihypertensive therapy in only 21.6% of visits in which a
systolic blood pressure >=160 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg
was documented. At visits with systolic and diastolic blood pressures >=155
and >=90 mm Hg, respectively, medications were increased only 25.6% of the
time. Similarly, in a study based in a large, Midwestern group practice,
pharmacological therapy was started or intensified in only 38% of visits in
which uncontrolled hypertension was documented.64
The most common reason cited by these physicians for not changing medication
was satisfaction with the current blood pressure or response to existing
therapy. Although these cross-sectional data cannot exclude the possibility
that medication changes were made at subsequent visits, longitudinal data
from the Framingham Heart Study indicate that [almost equal to]60% of
individuals with uncontrolled hypertension will continue to have inadequate
control after 4 years, despite opportunities to increase therapy in the
interim.85
Several factors may account for physicians’ lack of adherence to practice
guidelines for hypertension,86
including knowledge deficits,8
overestimation of compliance with guidelines,87
disagreement with guidelines,64,88 or
reluctance to make therapeutic changes, a behavior labeled “clinical inertia.”89
In a national survey of 316 primary care physicians, 41% were unfamiliar
with current JNC guidelines, and 43% would not initiate pharmacological
therapy unless the systolic blood pressure exceeded 160 mm Hg.8
Respondents were also less aggressive with hypothetical older patients than
with younger patients. Similar findings have been reported in other surveys
of healthcare professionals.64,90
Compounding this problem is the tendency for physicians to overestimate
their compliance with guidelines. In a survey of primary care providers at
Veterans Affairs medical centers, physicians overestimated the proportion of
their patients with controlled blood pressure by >30%.87
Reluctance of some physicians to adopt the systolic blood pressure
thresholds recommended by the JNC may contribute to reduced guideline
adherence.8,64 Despite convincing data
from observational studies supporting a linear association between systolic
blood pressure and cardiovascular risk to levels well below current
treatment thresholds,1 large, placebo-controlled
trials have not been performed enrolling individuals with mild systolic
hypertension (systolic blood pressure between 140 and 159 mm Hg).88
This fact may cause some physicians to have a more permissive approach
toward elderly patients with isolated systolic hypertension, the largest
subgroup of patients with uncontrolled hypertension.65
Concerns about increased cardiovascular risk with excessive lowering of
diastolic blood pressure (J-curve phenomenon) and impairment in quality of
life from antihypertensive medications may also contribute to this hesitancy,
although prospective trial data have not validated these concerns.91
Yet another factor that may contribute to the burden of uncontrolled
hypertension is the lack of clarity within guidelines with regard to
hypertension treatment under select clinical situations. For example,
Pedelty and Gorelick 92 note that
precise target blood pressure levels have not been delineated for stroke
patients. As a result, it is not clear how soon blood pressure should be
lowered after an acute stroke, the optimal rate of blood pressure lowering,
and the target pressure to be attained.
Finally, despite recognizing that blood pressures are elevated, physicians
may choose not to advance therapy.31,89
Phillips and colleagues 89 have
proposed several reasons for this clinical inertia, including overestimation
of adherence to guidelines as noted above, lack of practice supports to
facilitate the achievement of target blood pressures, and use of “soft”
justifications to avoid advancing care for asymptomatic patients. With
respect to the last point, physicians may rationalize that goals are within
reach and that more time may be needed to see the effects of therapy,93
reasons that are typically without pharmacological basis.
It is
also important to point out the caveats that must be considered when
physician adherence to practice guidelines is evaluated. Milchak et al
94 have presented a detailed
methodological critique of such assessment and underscored the importance of
assessing various components of hypertension care by using validated
performance measures and linking measures of blood pressure control to
clinical outcomes.
Quality of Hypertension Care: Impact of
Select Patient-Related Factors on Quality of Care Process and Association
With Poor Blood Pressure Control
Asch
et al 24 have recently described the
correlates of optimal care of patients with hypertension using explicit
indicators of the care process. They observed that the following categories
of hypertensive patients were more likely to receive optimal care: those >50
years of age; patients with diabetes, coronary artery disease, or
hyperlipidemia; and nonsmokers. Higher quality of care was directly
associated with better blood pressure control. Additional research is
warranted to better understand these patterns that seem to indicate poor
care for younger hypertensives who do not have other cardiac risk factors.
Can Better Blood Pressure Control Be
Achieved in Clinical Practice?
The
low rates of blood pressure control in national surveys stand in contrast to
the relatively high rates of control observed in randomized clinical trials.91,95,96
For instance, in the Anti-Hypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to
Prevent Heart Attack (ALLHAT) trial, 55% of participants in the 3 treatment
arms had blood pressure controlled <140/90 mm Hg at the first annual visit,
and 66% of participants were at this target 4 years later.96
In the Controlled Onset Verapamil Investigation of Cardiovascular Endpoints
(CONVINCE) study, 85% of participants were controlled at the end of the
titration period, and control rates exceeded 60% throughout the trial.95
Although control rates from randomized trials cannot be directly compared
with those from observational studies because all participants in trials are
aware of their hypertension and are under treatment, the trial data attest
to the feasibility of achieving the blood pressure targets recommended by
the JNC. In ALLHAT, a dramatic increase in blood pressure control was
observed from the prerandomization visit (27%) to the 5-year follow-up
(66%), supporting the premise that these results are largely attributable to
improved treatment of hypertension rather than patient selection.96
It is also noteworthy that both ALLHAT and CONVINCE were conducted in a
variety of practice settings and that the care was delivered predominantly
by primary care physicians rather than specialists.97
Several factors may account for the higher rates of control in clinical
trials, including guaranteed access to care, free medications, compliant
patients, motivated physicians, “goal-oriented” blood pressure management,
and predetermined titration algorithms.60,97
Whether any of these conditions can be replicated in actual clinical
practice remains unclear.
Measures That May Improve Hypertension
Control
A
number of studies have examined the effect of interventions to improve
patient compliance and physician adherence with hypertension guidelines.
Patient-targeted interventions have emphasized educational initiatives,98–102
improved affordability of health care,103
pill packaging,104,105 electronic
medication monitors, and formal reminders,102,106,107
among other strategies. Most of these studies report improvements in blood
pressure control, although publication bias may contribute to the
predominance of favorable studies in the literature. Roter and colleagues
108 performed a meta-analysis of
studies of patient-targeted interventions for a wide range of conditions, of
which hypertension was the second most common studied. They did not identify
an approach that was clearly superior to others but did find that multi-tiered
interventions were generally more effective than single-focus interventions.
Interventions integrating multiple approaches, including better doctor-patient
communication, may improve patient acceptance of therapies that might
otherwise be perceived as unnecessary or prone to side effects.83
There
have been fewer studies of interventions specifically targeting physician
practices in hypertension control.109–111
It is recognized that even high levels of patient compliance do not ensure
good rates of blood pressure control because physicians may be hesitant to
make medication changes.89
Educational initiatives may improve adherence to guidelines,109
although the literature on interventions to improve physician practice
indicates that education alone is not sufficient.112,113
Prior studies have demonstrated success with more “active” measures such as
computer-generated reminders and provision of feedback.110,112,114
The inclusion of hypertension control as a quality of care measure in HEDIS
is a form of feedback that may have contributed to increased control rates
in participating health plans between 2000 and 2003.15
Finally, an extreme measure to overcome clinical inertia is “forced
titration” of hypertensive medications when blood pressures are not at goal,
an approach used in many clinical trials.60
Although this practice appears effective, it would be difficult to implement
in community practices.
Recently, attention has been focused on how care is delivered to
hypertensive patients, including the types of providers and specific disease
management programs.48,109,115 In
1998, the American Society of Hypertension created the designation
“specialist in clinical hypertension,” which is currently held by >700
physicians in the United States. Several studies have suggested that high
rates of control can be achieved in referral clinics staffed by hypertension
specialists, even among patients felt to have difficult-to-treat
hypertension.48,116,117 Other studies
have emphasized that nonphysician providers such as nurses, nurse
practitioners, and pharmacists can play a critical role in improving the
quality of hypertension care.111,117–119
Indeed, it has been proposed that the lack of a multidisciplinary approach
is an important reason that the hypertension control rates achieved in
randomized trials have not been replicated in actual practice.120
Nurse-led clinics may be particularly helpful for treating patients with
hypertension and comorbidities such as coronary heart disease or diabetes;
advantages of such clinics include the ability to accommodate more frequent
patient visits, a greater willingness to titrate medications, and attention
to lifestyle measures.121–123 A
potential adjunct to multidisciplinary programs is to involve patients in
the monitoring of medication changes by self-measurement of blood pressure
117 or transmission of blood pressure
data over telephone lines,124
although the economic and clinical implications of home blood pressure
measurement are not well established.125
Future Research Directions
Studies of the epidemiology of uncontrolled hypertension have provided both
cause for concern and reason for optimism. The concern stems from the
finding in national surveys that up to two thirds of adults with
hypertension in this country are inadequately treated. This represents a
major missed opportunity for cardiovascular disease prevention, given the
importance of hypertension as a risk factor for stroke, coronary heart
disease, and heart failure. It has been estimated that a third to a half of
coronary heart disease events could be prevented with optimal control of
blood pressure at the population level.61
If improved control rates are not attained, the medical and financial burden
of these excess events would grow substantially in the next several decades
because of the aging of the population and the high prevalence of
hypertension in the elderly.
However, there may also be reason for optimism. Although increases in
hypertension control have fallen short of goals, most longitudinal studies
suggest that gains have been made in the past several decades.7
National data show that individuals with hypertension have access to health
care and see physicians regularly,65
meaning that opportunities for intervention continue to exist. Additionally,
the experience reported from randomized trials and hypertension clinics
demonstrates that high rates of control are achievable with currently
available therapies.
The
Healthy People 2010 report targets a control rate of 50% in 5 years, which
would be reached if at least 80% of hypertensive individuals were aware of
their condition, 90% were treated, and 70% of those treated were controlled.56,126
Recent NHANES data indicate that improvements are needed in all 3 areas,
suggesting that multi-pronged approaches are required to increase both
patient awareness and patient and physician adherence to treatment
guidelines.6 One foundation for these
interventions is further research to address several of the unanswered
questions in hypertension care and control (Table
4). Studies of the past 20 years have led to a greater recognition that
the pioneering advances from clinical trials are not being adequately
translated into clinical practice. A concerted, multidisciplinary effort is
needed to ensure that the benefits of this research are fully realized in
future decades.
|
TABLE 4.
Future Research Directions |
1.
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