Introduction: An empathetic approach may be particularly useful in patients with therapy-resistant hypertension (TRH), defined as the failure to achieve target blood pressure (BP) despite a maximal doses of 3 antihypertensive drugs including a diuretic. However, the effects of therapeutic concordance have not been determined in hy-pertensive patients. Methods: We designed a study to explore the impact of therapeutic concordance in patients with TRH, who were included in an intervention arm based on a protocol in which trained personnel periodically verified the phar-macological regimen of these patients. Results: From a cohort of 5331 hypertensive patients followed-up for 77.64 +/- 34.44 months, 886 subjects were found to have TRH; of these, 322 had apparent TRH (aTRH: uncontrolled office BP but optimal home BP) and 285 refused to participate in a second follow-up study, yielding a population of 279 patients with true TRH (tTRH). These tTRH patients were followed according to the therapeutic concordance protocol for 91.91 +/- 54.7 months, revealing that 210 patients (75.27%) remained with uncontrolled BP (uncontrolled tTRH, Group I) while 69 patients (24.73%) reached an optimal BP control (average BP <140/90 mmHg in at least 50% of follow-up visits, Group II). Strikingly, at the end of the second follow-up, the percentage of patients displaying a decline in kidney function was significantly smaller in Group II than in Group I (8.5% vs 23.4%, p < 0.012).. Conclusions: Taken together, our findings indicate for the first time that therapeutic concordance significantly improves the outcome of antihypertensive treatment in a population of patients with TRH.

Therapeutic concordance improves blood pressure control in patients with resistant hypertension

Mone, Pasquale;Esposito, Giovanni;
2023-01-01

Abstract

Introduction: An empathetic approach may be particularly useful in patients with therapy-resistant hypertension (TRH), defined as the failure to achieve target blood pressure (BP) despite a maximal doses of 3 antihypertensive drugs including a diuretic. However, the effects of therapeutic concordance have not been determined in hy-pertensive patients. Methods: We designed a study to explore the impact of therapeutic concordance in patients with TRH, who were included in an intervention arm based on a protocol in which trained personnel periodically verified the phar-macological regimen of these patients. Results: From a cohort of 5331 hypertensive patients followed-up for 77.64 +/- 34.44 months, 886 subjects were found to have TRH; of these, 322 had apparent TRH (aTRH: uncontrolled office BP but optimal home BP) and 285 refused to participate in a second follow-up study, yielding a population of 279 patients with true TRH (tTRH). These tTRH patients were followed according to the therapeutic concordance protocol for 91.91 +/- 54.7 months, revealing that 210 patients (75.27%) remained with uncontrolled BP (uncontrolled tTRH, Group I) while 69 patients (24.73%) reached an optimal BP control (average BP <140/90 mmHg in at least 50% of follow-up visits, Group II). Strikingly, at the end of the second follow-up, the percentage of patients displaying a decline in kidney function was significantly smaller in Group II than in Group I (8.5% vs 23.4%, p < 0.012).. Conclusions: Taken together, our findings indicate for the first time that therapeutic concordance significantly improves the outcome of antihypertensive treatment in a population of patients with TRH.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11695/120609
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