Landmark Hypertension Treatment Study Launches Extensive Physician
and Patient Education Program to Improve Public Health
Researchers in the largest high blood pressure clinical trial ever conducted
are launching a comprehensive outreach program to improve high blood pressure
control nationwide. About 150 physicians in 34 states and Washington, DC, have
completed training to educate other physicians in their communities. Their goal:
to help doctors and patients prevent and better treat high blood pressure.
The new $3.7 million, three-year educational effort is a follow-up to the landmark
Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT)
and is being implemented in collaboration with the National High Blood Pressure
Education Program (NHBPEP). Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
(NHLBI), part of the National Institutes of Health, the ALLHAT blood pressure
study compared the effects of four major classes of medications to treat high
blood pressure. More than 42,000 patients ages 55 and older participated. The
main results were published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in December 2002 and played a central role in NHBPEP's revision of the clinical
practice guidelines on high blood pressure released in May 2003 (Seventh
Report of the Joint National Committee on the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation
and Treatment of High Blood Pressure).
"It often takes years for the results of major studies to become part of standard
health care," notes NHLBI director Elizabeth G. Nabel, MD. "The results of ALLHAT
and the clinical guidelines could have an enormous impact on the health of millions
of Americans. We are confident that by playing a more active role in sharing
the information, we will be able to put the results into action more quickly
and more effectively."
An estimated 65 million American adults — nearly one in three — have high blood
pressure. But, for more than two-thirds of them, blood pressure remains out of
control. High blood pressure leads to more than half of all heart attacks, strokes,
and heart failure cases in the United States each year, and it increases the
risk of kidney failure and blindness. Clinical guidelines recommend that physicians
work with patients to keep blood pressures below 140/90 mmHg, even lower for
people with diabetes or kidney disease, and encourage all their patients to make
healthy lifestyle changes, such as losing excess weight, becoming physically
active, limiting alcoholic beverages, and following a heart-healthy eating plan,
including cutting back on salt and other forms of sodium, and not smoking.
ALLHAT researchers reported in 2002 that, overall, diuretics are more beneficial
than calcium channel blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors,
or alpha blockers as initial treatment to lower blood pressure and to protect
against adverse effects of high blood pressure. For patients with diabetes or
with mildly elevated fasting glucose — a sign of pre-diabetes — diuretics are at
least as effective, and in some cases more beneficial, than the other two classes
of medications, according to ALLHAT findings published in June 2005.
In general, diuretics are well tolerated by patients, with few side effects.
Sometimes called "water pills," diuretics reduce the amount of fluid in the body
by helping the kidneys flush excess water and salt from the body.
The other medications lower blood pressure differently. Calcium channel blockers
keep calcium from entering the muscle cells of the heart and blood vessels, causing
the blood vessels to relax. ACE inhibitors prevent the formation of a hormone
called angiotensin II, which normally causes blood vessels to narrow. Alpha blockers
allow blood to pass more easily by reducing nerve impulses to blood vessels.
However, ALLHAT found that participants taking alpha blockers had 25 percent
more cardiovascular events and were twice as likely to be hospitalized for heart
failure as those taking the diuretic. Because of these findings, the alpha blocker
arm of the study was stopped early.
“Based on the results, the ALLHAT investigators recommend that in addition to
lifestyle changes, diuretics should be the drug of choice for first line blood
pressure treatment,” says William C. Cushman, MD, chair of the ALLHAT Dissemination
Committee and chief of Preventive Medicine at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center
in Memphis. “Because most patients require more than one drug, diuretics should
generally be part of any antihypertensive regimen.”
Cushman cites another advantage for using diuretics. “They are much less expensive
than the other two drug classes. For those stretching their budgets, taking a
medicine which costs less than $100 a year is a very good thing.”
In the past 20 years, however, prescriptions for newer, more costly medications
began replacing diuretics. The newer drugs were shown to lower blood pressure
and heart disease risk compared to placebo, but how the drugs compared to each
other was unknown until ALLHAT. Analyses of prescribing trends suggest that prescriptions
for diuretics have slowly begun to rise since the study ended and clinical guidelines
have encouraged the use of diuretics either alone or in combination with other
blood-pressure lowering medications.
"The guidelines were simplified and strengthened to emphasize the most effective
ways to control blood pressure — starting with lifestyle changes and including
diuretics when medication is needed," notes Jeffrey Cutler, MD, NHLBI senior
advisor and ALLHAT project director.
The ALLHAT Dissemination Plan includes materials for investigator educators
to lead small, interactive educational sessions with physician peers. Educators
are asked to make at least one presentation per month. The sessions include discussions
of the study results, current hypertension treatment guidelines, and common concerns
in clinical practice. Each educator receives training, presentation slides and
handouts, and materials such as posters and brochures for clinicians to use in
their offices. The educators expect to reach nearly 30,000 physicians by September
2006.
The dissemination plan also provides materials to encourage patients to ask
their health care providers about their blood pressure control and the medicines
they take. Brochures, recipe books, and other tools to help patients adapt healthier
lifestyles are also available.
Resources:
To schedule an interview:
- Jeffrey Cutler, MD, NHLBI senior advisor and ALLHAT project officer — contact
the NHLBI Communications Office at (301) 496-4236.
- Edward Roccella, PhD, MPH, coordinator of the National High Blood Pressure
Education Program — contact NHLBI as above.
- William C. Cushman, MD, chair of the ALLHAT Dissemination Committee and chief
of Preventive Medicine at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Memphis — contact
Willie Logan, communications and public affairs officer, 901 577-7224.
- Barry Davis, MD, PhD, director of the ALLHAT Clinical Trials Center, University
of Texas Health Science Center at Houston — contact Scott Merville, senior
media relations specialist, 713-500-3030, or Scott.Merville@uth.tmc.edu.
NHLBI is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Federal Government’s
primary agency for biomedical and behavioral research. NIH is a component of
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NHLBI press releases and
other materials including information about high blood pressure are available
online at www.nhlbi.nih.gov.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's Medical Research
Agency — includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of
the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary Federal
agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical
research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common
and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov. |