Treatment of hypertension
The extent of target-organ damage, if any
•
The presence of established cardiovascular or kidney disease
•
The presence or absence of other cardiovascular risk factors
•
Lifestyle factors that could potentially contribute to hypertension
•
Potential interfering substances (eg, chronic use of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory
drugs [NSAIDs], oral contraceptives)
•
Lifestyle modification should be prescribed to all patients with elevated blood
pressure or hypertension (
table 9
); however, not all patients diagnosed with
hypertension require pharmacologic therapy. (See
'Nonpharmacologic therapy'
above.)
●
The decision to initiate drug therapy should be individualized and involve shared
decision-making between patient and provider. In general, we suggest that
antihypertensive drug therapy be initiated in the following hypertensive patients (see
'Who should be treated with pharmacologic therapy?'
above):
●
Patients with out-of-office daytime blood pressure ≥135 mmHg systolic or ≥85
mmHg diastolic (or an average office blood pressure ≥140 mmHg systolic or ≥90
mmHg diastolic if out-of-office readings not available)
•
Patients with an out-of-office blood pressure (mean home or daytime ambulatory)
≥
130 mmHg systolic or ≥80 mmHg diastolic (or, if out-of-office readings are
unavailable, the average of appropriately measured office readings ≥130 mmHg
systolic or ≥80 mmHg diastolic) who have one or more of the following features:
•
Established clinical cardiovascular disease (eg, chronic coronary syndrome
[stable ischemic heart disease], heart failure, carotid disease, previous stroke,
or peripheral arterial disease)
-
Type 2 diabetes mellitus
-
Chronic kidney disease
-
Age 65 years or older
-
An estimated 10-year risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease of at least
10 percent (
calculator 1
)
-
However, in patients who have stage 1 hypertension (130 to 139 mmHg systolic or
80 to 89 mmHg diastolic), we would consider withholding antihypertensive therapy
among those 75 years or older or those who do not have established
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, or chronic kidney disease if, in addition, they
have recurrent falls, dementia, multiple comorbidities, orthostatic hypotension,
•
residence in a nursing home, or limited life expectancy. (See
'Who should be
treated with pharmacologic therapy?'
above.)
Some patients have a “compelling” indication for a specific drug or drugs that are
unrelated to primary hypertension (
table 10
). If there are no specific indications for
a particular medication based upon comorbidities, we recommend that initial therapy
be chosen from among the following four classes of medications (see
'Choice of initial
antihypertensive agents'
above):
●
Thiazide-like or thiazide-type diuretics
•
Long-acting calcium channel blockers (most often a dihydropyridine such as
amlodipine
)
•
Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors
•
Angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs)
•
Our suggestions for goal blood pressure are as follows and depend upon the patient’s
baseline risk of having a cardiovascular event (see
'Blood pressure goals (targets)'
above):
●
We suggest a goal blood pressure of <130 mmHg systolic and <80 mmHg diastolic
using out-of-office measurements (or, if out-of-office blood pressure is not
available, then an average of appropriately measured office readings) in most
patients who qualify for antihypertensive pharmacologic therapy.
•
However, there is some disagreement among UpToDate authors and editors.
Some believe that, among selected hypertensive patients who qualify for
antihypertensive therapy but who are at low absolute cardiovascular risk, a less
aggressive goal blood pressure of <135 mmHg systolic and <85 mmHg diastolic
(using out-of-office measurement) or <140 mmHg systolic and <90 mmHg diastolic
(using an average of appropriately measured office readings) is appropriate.
We suggest a less aggressive goal blood pressure of <135 mmHg systolic and <85
mmHg diastolic (using out-of-office measurement) or <140 mmHg systolic and <90
mmHg diastolic (using an average of appropriately measured office readings) in
the following groups of hypertensive patients:
•
Patients with highly variable (labile) blood pressure or postural hypotension
-
Patients with side effects to multiple antihypertensive medications
-
Patients 75 years or older with a high burden of comorbidity or a diastolic
blood pressure <55 mmHg
-
In older adults with severe frailty, dementia, and/or a limited life expectancy, or in
patients who are non-ambulatory or institutionalized (eg, reside in a skilled
•
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