Treatment of hypertension in subjects aged 80 years and older was associated with a 14% higher total mortality (p=0.05) in a meta-analysis of randomized trials.
Does treatment of hypertension improve survival in very old patients (aged 80 years and older)?
Treatment of hypertension in patients aged 80 years and older may be associated with increased mortality, suggesting the need to stratify older subjects by physiologic vigor rather than age alone.
Effect estimate: 14% higher
p-value: p=0.05
The consequences of hypertension and its treatment differ in very old men and women compared to younger populations. In populations aged 85 years and older, higher levels of systolic and diastolic blood pressures are associated with increased survival, and this relationship is not eliminated by controlling for comorbidity, blood pressure treatment, and other relevant factors. In addition, in 3 of the 4 published randomized controlled trials of treatment of hypertension that included subjects aged 80 years or older, the investigators reported loss of efficacy of treatment in preventing the primary end points in subjects aged 80 and older. In a meta-analysis of those trials, total mortality was actually 14% higher (p =.05) in the treatment group for subjects aged 80 years and older. These data suggest 2 conclusions. First, we should reexamine that dictum that nontreatment of hypertension in those aged 80 years and older is de facto evidence of "ageism." Second, we are unlikely to come to any set of coherent "rules" regarding treatment of hypertension (and several other conditions) in the very old until we routinely stratify all older subjects enrolled in interventional or observational trials by indicators of physiologic vigor.
James S. Goodwin (Tue,) conducted a review in Hypertension. Hypertension treatment vs. Control was evaluated on Total mortality (14% higher, p=0.05). Treatment of hypertension in subjects aged 80 years and older was associated with a 14% higher total mortality (p=0.05) in a meta-analysis of randomized trials.