Blood pressure guidelines for
stroke may not be relevant to many patients
Newswise — Guidelines on blood
pressure lowering after stroke may not be applicable to many
patients under the care of their family doctor, warn researchers in
this week’s BMJ.
International guidelines stress
the importance of lowering blood pressure in people who have had a
stroke. These guidelines are largely based on the results of the
PROGRESS trial, which recruited people with stroke from hospital.
But are these guidelines relevant
to patients in primary care, ask researchers at the University of
Birmingham?
They compared the characteristics
of stroke patients from seven general practices in Birmingham with
those of the participants in the PROGRESS trial.
Patients were 12 years older than
the PROGRESS participants and twice as likely to be women. The
average time that had elapsed since their cerebrovascular event was
two to three years, compared with eight months in PROGRESS.
For 61% of patients systolic blood
pressure was above the target recommended in the UK guidelines, and
for 77% it was over the target set out by the British Hypertension
Society.
The “typical” stroke patient in
general practice is very different from the PROGRESS study
population, say the authors. In this case, the differences are so
great that they undermine the applicability of the research to
primary care.
Research in appropriate
populations is urgently needed before international guidelines are
implemented in primary care, they conclude.