ڴŮ

SPRINT Likely to Change, But Not Revolutionize, BP Tx

— Systolic pressure: goal of less than 120 mm Hg is good for many but not all

Last Updated November 10, 2015
MedpageToday

This article is a collaboration between ڴŮ and:

Now that the data has been published, it looks like SPRINT trial really may have a significant impact on clinical practice and future guidelines, but it also seems likely that it will not change the treatment of high blood pressure for everyone.

That's the broad consensus emerging from hypertension experts and others who have started to dig into the details of this very important and large NIH-funded trial.

Action Points

  • Note that the SPRINT trial found that a systolic blood pressure treatment target of 120 mmHg was superior to 140 mmHg among those older than age 50 with significant cardiovascular risk factors.
  • Be aware that the mean achieved blood pressure in the intensive treatment arm was 121.

Although SPRINT offers solid support for a more intensive approach to lowering blood pressure for many people similar to those studied in the trial, some experts say it does not support the establishment of a universal systolic blood pressure target of less than 120 mm Hg.

In SPRINT, 9,361 people with systolic blood pressure of 130 mm Hg or higher and at elevated risk for cardiovascular disease but without diabetes were randomized to standard treatment with a blood pressure target under 140 mm Hg or intensive treatment with a blood pressure target under 120 mm Hg.

Results of the trial were presented on Monday at the in Orlando and published simultaneously in the . When the trial was stopped back in September the announcement of the created a media sensation.

The SPRINT Details

The investigators reported a "rapid and sustained between-group difference in systolic blood pressure." At 1 year, blood pressure levels were 121.4 mm Hg in the intensive treatment group and 136.2 mm Hg in the standard treatment group. The mean number of BP medications was 2.8 in the intensive treatment group and 1.8 in the standard treatment group.

After 3.26 years, the trial was stopped due to a significantly lower rate of the composite endpoint (myocardial infarction, acute coronary syndrome, stroke, heart failure, or cardiovascular death): 5.2% in the intensive treatment group versus 6.8% in the standard treatment group (HR 0.75, 95% confidence interval 0.64-0.89, P<0.001). In absolute numbers, there were 243 major endpoint events in the intensive treatment group and 319 in the standard treatment group.

Importantly, the investigators also recorded a significant reduction in all-cause and cardiovascular deaths in the trial. There were 155 deaths in the intensive treatment group versus 210 in the standard treatment group (3.3% versus 4.5%, HR 0.73, 95% CI 0.60-0.90, P=0.003). There were 37 cardiovascular deaths in the intensive treatment group versus 65 in the standard treatment group (0.8% versus 1.4%, HR 0.57, 95% CI 0.38-0.85, p=0.005).

For the individual components of the primary endpoint there were no significant differences in MI, ACS, or stroke. Most of the difference in the composite endpoint was driven by the significant reductions in cardiovascular death and a 38% reduction in heart failure.

The authors calculated the numbers need to treat (NNT) as:

  • 61 to prevent a primary endpoint event
  • 90 to prevent a death
  • 72 to prevent a cardiovascular death

As expected, there was a greater number of more serious adverse events in the intensive treatment group, including syncope, electrolyte abnormalities, and acute kidney injury or renal failure, but there was no difference in injurious falls.

SPRINT in Perspective

The authors sought to explain the apparent discrepancy with an earlier trial, ACCORD, which failed to demonstrate that more intense blood pressure treatment was beneficial in a diabetic patient population. The discrepancy "could be due to differences in study design, treatment interactions, or the play of chance," they wrote.

They thought it unlikely but could not rule out the idea that there is "an inherent difference in the cardiovascular benefits of systolic blood-pressure lowering between the population with diabetes and the population without diabetes."

Striking a theme repeated by many other observers, the authors said that the results should not automatically be generalized to groups not included in the trial, including younger patients under 50, diabetics, and patients with a prior stroke. They also noted that it was important to wait for results of forthcoming studies to learn the effect of intensive treatment on the brain and the kidney.

The New England Journal of Medicine and other journals published a slew of accompanying commentaries and articles seeking to interpret the trial.

In a NEJM accompanying editorial, , and , both of the University of Sydney, said that SPRINT will "have far-reaching implications." Responding to concerns that benefits may be overestimated when trials are stopped early, they wrote that "this is unlikely for SPRINT, which had more than 500 primary outcome events." They write that the results of SPRINT and ACCORD are "generally consistent," with SPRINT providing the statistical power lacking in ACCORD. "More broadly, labeling trials as 'positive' or 'negative' is seductive but ultimately counterproductive; it is more helpful to look at the totality of available data."

The editorialists wrote that SPRINT "strongly supports pharmacotherapy decisions based on absolute risk levels, in a similar way to current recommendations for lipid lowering," suggesting a goal of 120 mm Hg may be appropriate for people at high risk of a cardiovascular event.

Rodgers was also the senior author on the recently published Lancet meta-analysis about the effects of intensive lowering of blood pressure.

The results of SPRINT are not applicable to people with diabetes, stroke patients, or institutionalized elderly people, since they were excluded from the study, wrote , of Boston University Medical Center, in an accompanying perspective in NEJM.

Chobanian supported more aggressive treatment -- certainly a target less than 150 mm Hg -- but took "a conservative view" about an overall target of 120 mm Hg "for most people with hypertension." The average systolic blood pressure was 121.5 with very tight control, so while this may be technically true, it’s not a reasonable rationale not to aim for a systolic BP of

But Chobanian noted that the more strict levels of 120 or 130 mm Hg "create major challenges for clinicians." Suddenly a majority of U.S. hypertensives would be defined as having uncontrolled hypertension. Further, a strict target would necessarily require that many people take at least three drugs, though "many clinicians and their patients with hypertension are reluctant to go beyond two different antihypertensive drugs."

A paper by , PhD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and colleagues published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology used NHANES data to estimate the size of the U.S. population that would fit the SPRINT criteria. They estimated that there are more than 25 million U.S. adults 50 years of age or older with a systolic blood pressure of 120 mm Hg or greater, at high risk for cardiovascular disease, and who do not have any of the trial's exclusion criteria.

In an article in Hypertension, , and colleagues at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, also raised the question: "how generalizable are the results?" They argued that recommendations for diabetic patients will necessarily rely on expert opinion rather than a firm evidence base, given the ambiguity and uncertainty around the ACCORD results. More generally, they wrote, "Given that SPRINT only included patients with, or at high risk for, cardiovascular disease, the committee might consider whether treatment recommendations should be based on global cardiovascular risk rather than BP alone."

Some of the SPRINT investigators, in another commentary in Hypertension, warned that hypertension could be overestimated and overrated by clinicians who seek to incorporate the SPRINT results but who don't follow the rigorous standards used in the trial for diagnosing high blood pressure.

Another commentary in Hypertension, of Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, expressed doubt that SPRINT has established "a new 'universal' target blood pressure." Although the results should certainly guide treatment strategies for patients like the SPRINT population, he wrote that patients with more severe grades of hypertension will likely not derive the same benefit from a lower target.

And in yet another commentary -- also in Hypertension -- , of the University of Glasgow, wrote that "the adverse outcomes of SPRINT should not be overlooked lightly, especially since hypotension and acute kidney disease are associated with their own morbidity and mortality."

, of the University of Wisconsin in Madison, delivered a thoughtful response to the trial:

"The results of SPRINT, along with last week's meta-analysis and persistent controversy surrounding the last hypertension guidelines now solidify the need for a hypertension guideline re-do. The previous focus on higher targets was misguided and based on an overly narrow interpretation of the data. But the key question from SPRINT is 'how can we reproduce these highly favorable results in our practices in real patients who differ from trial participants and the setting of a clinical trial in meaningful ways?'

"Key aspects will be patient selection (age over 50, higher cardiovascular risk, blood pressure >130), initial drug choice (usually combo therapy), and careful titration (monthly follow-up) as in SPRINT. Extrapolation beyond the types of subjects in this study should be done with caution, For example, the results likely can be extrapolated safely in younger and otherwise healthy adults facing a lifetime of potential complications but should be done much more cautiously in diabetic patients, those with previous strokes, the very old, those with severe kidney disease (stage 5), or significant comorbidities -- including those already on too many drugs thus excluded from SPRINT. In these latter types of patients, the risk-to-benefit ratio of more aggressive treatment is likely narrow than seen in SPRINT.

"I love target-based guidelines but they need to be implemented with common sense. If we say a target of 120 mmHg is correct, we need to recognize that even in SPRINT, the mean on treatment BP was 121 mm Hg and more drugs for a few additional points might not be necessary."

The AHA and ACC are currently in the process of updating the last NHBLI-sanctioned JNC guideline, which was published in 2007.

Disclosures

The study was supported by contracts and an interagency agreement from the NIH, including the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

Takeda and Arbor Pharmaceuticals donated medications used in the study.

Jones, Touyz, Chobanian, Munter, and Jones disclosed no relevant relationships with industry.

Perkovic disclosed relationships with AbbieVie, Janssen, Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly, Astellas, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Servier, and Pfizer.

Rodgers disclosed relationships with Servier and salary support from George Health Enterprises, which receives investment for development of fixed-dose combination therapy containing blood pressure lowering medication among others.

Primary Source

New England Journal of Medicine

Wright JT Jr, et al "A randomized trial of intensive versus standard blood-pressure control (SPRINT)" N Engl J Med 2015.

Secondary Source

New England Journal of Medicine

Chobanian AV "Time to reassess blood-pressure goals" N Engl J Med 2015.

Additional Source

Journal of the American College of Cardiology

Bress AP, et al "Generalizability of results from the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) to the US adult population" J Am Coll Cardiol 2015.