Global cardiovascular risk associated with hypertension and extent of treatment and control according to risk group

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Abstract

Background Hypertension (HTN) confers increased cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk; however, the variation in risk and how treatment and control rates may differ according to extent of risk needs clarification. We examined CVD risk distribution and treatment and control patterns according to risk group. Methods We estimated 10-year Framingham global risk in 1,509 US persons aged ≥30 years from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2005-2006 with HTN and the proportion of subjects in low (10%), intermediate (10-20%), and high (>20%) risk groups, or with pre-existing CVD, or who otherwise had high cardiometabolic risk according to European Society of Hypertension (ESH) criteria (diabetes (DM), metabolic syndrome (MetS), stage 3 HTN, or 3 additional CVD risk factors). We also examined HTN treatment and control rates by risk group. Results From Framingham risk assessment, 24% of subjects were low risk, 21% intermediate risk, 23% high risk, and 32% had CVD. An additional 39% of low and 51% of intermediate risk subjects were at high or very high risk based on European criteria, for a total of 80% classified high risk or with CVD by either criterion. Treatment rates across Framingham risk groups ranged from 58 to 75%. HTN control rates were over 80% for lower risk persons, but under 50% for higher risk subjects. Conclusions There is a wide variation in CVD risk in persons with HTN with control rates still suboptimal in higher risk subjects. Future guidelines should consider risk stratification combining shorter and longer-term risk assessment to best identify those who have the greatest CVD risk. © 2012 American Journal of Hypertension, Ltd.

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Wong, N. D., Dede, J., Chow, V. H., Wong, K. S., & Franklin, S. S. (2012). Global cardiovascular risk associated with hypertension and extent of treatment and control according to risk group. American Journal of Hypertension, 25(5), 561–567. https://doi.org/10.1038/ajh.2012.2

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