Does intensive blood pressure lowering mitigate the association between visit-to-visit blood pressure variability and cognitive decline?
2,348 participants from the SPRINT MIND trial who underwent 4 blood pressure measurements over a 9-month period after treatment randomization and ≥ 1 neuropsychological evaluation thereafter
Intensive blood pressure lowering (analyzed for visit-to-visit blood pressure variability)
Standard blood pressure lowering
Cognitive composite scores for global cognition, memory, language, executive function, and processing speed over a planned 4-year follow-upsurrogate
Elevated visit-to-visit blood pressure variability is associated with cognitive decline in patients on standard blood pressure targets, but this risk appears to be mitigated by intensive blood pressure lowering.
BACKGROUND: Blood pressure (BP) variability (BPV) is an emerging risk factor for cognitive impairment and dementia, but relationships with cognition in the context of antihypertensive strategies remain unclear. We examined whether visit-to-visit BPV relates to cognitive change based on antihypertensive treatment type. METHODS: In this post hoc analysis of the SPRINT MIND trial, 2,348 participants underwent 4 BP measurements over a 9-month period after treatment randomization (standard vs. intensive BP lowering) and ≥ 1 neuropsychological evaluation thereafter. BPV was calculated as tertiles of BP SD. Participants underwent cognitive testing at baseline and every 2 years during the planned 4-year follow-up. Cognitive composite scores were calculated for global cognition, memory, language, executive function, and processing speed. Linear mixed models investigated relationships between BPV, antihypertensive treatment group, and time on cognitive composite scores. RESULTS: Elevated BPV was associated with the fastest decline in processing speed (ß = -.07 95% CI -.12, -.01; P = 0.02) and executive function (ß = -.08 95% CI -.16, -.006; P = 0.03) in the standard treatment group only. BPV was not related to cognitive change in the intensive treatment group. Mean/minimum/maximum BP was not associated with cognitive composite scores over time in either antihypertensive treatment group. CONCLUSIONS: Elevated BPV remains a risk for cognitive decline despite strictly controlled BP levels, in the standard treatment group. Specific declines were observed in processing speed and executive function, domains often impacted by cerebrovascular disease and may underpin risk for dementia and cerebrovascular disease associated with BPV. Clinical trial information: ClinicalTrials.gov; NCT01206062.
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Isabel J. Sible
Vascular Medicine
Daniel A. Nation
Vascular Medicine
American Journal of Hypertension
University of Southern California
University of California, Irvine
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Sible et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a22e12e4af801cf29605bd8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ajh/hpac128