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Night-day blood pressure ratio and dipping pattern as predictors of death and cardiovascular events in hypertension.
J Hum Hypertens. 2009 Oct; 23(10):645-53.JH

Abstract

Our objective was to assess the prognostic significance of the night-time dipping pattern and the night-day blood pressure (BP) ratio for mortality and cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients without major cardiovascular disease at baseline. We performed a meta-analysis on individual data of 3468 patients from four prospective studies performed in Europe. Age of the subjects averaged 61+/-13 years; 45% were men and 61% were under antihypertensive treatment at the time of ambulatory BP monitoring. The night-day BP ratio and 24-h BP averaged, respectively, 0.907+/-0.085/0.866+/-0.095 and 138.1+/-16.4/82.3+/-11.0 mm Hg. Total follow-up time amounted to 23 164 patient-years. We used multivariable Cox regression analysis to assess the outcome of reverse dippers, non-dippers and extreme dippers vs dippers, and to assess the hazard ratios associated with 1 standard deviation higher night-day BP ratio. In comparison with dippers, and with adjustment for confounders and 24-h BP, the incidence of cardiovascular events was worse in reverse dippers (P<or=0.05), whereas mortality was lower in extreme dippers (P<or=0.01); outcome was similar in non-dippers and dippers. The systolic night-day BP ratio independently predicted all-cause mortality and cardiovascular events (P<or=0.001), which persisted after additional adjustment for 24-h BP (P<or=0.05); appropriate interaction terms indicated that the results were similar in men and women, in younger and older patients and in treated and untreated patients. In conclusion, the dipping pattern and the night-day BP ratio significantly and independently predict mortality and cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients without history of major cardiovascular disease, even after adjustment for 24-h BP.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Hypertension and Cardiovascular Rehabilitation Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. robert.fagard@uz.kuleuven.ac.beNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Meta-Analysis

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19225527

Citation

Fagard, R H., et al. "Night-day Blood Pressure Ratio and Dipping Pattern as Predictors of Death and Cardiovascular Events in Hypertension." Journal of Human Hypertension, vol. 23, no. 10, 2009, pp. 645-53.
Fagard RH, Thijs L, Staessen JA, et al. Night-day blood pressure ratio and dipping pattern as predictors of death and cardiovascular events in hypertension. J Hum Hypertens. 2009;23(10):645-53.
Fagard, R. H., Thijs, L., Staessen, J. A., Clement, D. L., De Buyzere, M. L., & De Bacquer, D. A. (2009). Night-day blood pressure ratio and dipping pattern as predictors of death and cardiovascular events in hypertension. Journal of Human Hypertension, 23(10), 645-53. https://doi.org/10.1038/jhh.2009.9
Fagard RH, et al. Night-day Blood Pressure Ratio and Dipping Pattern as Predictors of Death and Cardiovascular Events in Hypertension. J Hum Hypertens. 2009;23(10):645-53. PubMed PMID: 19225527.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Night-day blood pressure ratio and dipping pattern as predictors of death and cardiovascular events in hypertension. AU - Fagard,R H, AU - Thijs,L, AU - Staessen,J A, AU - Clement,D L, AU - De Buyzere,M L, AU - De Bacquer,D A, Y1 - 2009/02/19/ PY - 2009/2/20/entrez PY - 2009/2/20/pubmed PY - 2009/12/16/medline SP - 645 EP - 53 JF - Journal of human hypertension JO - J Hum Hypertens VL - 23 IS - 10 N2 - Our objective was to assess the prognostic significance of the night-time dipping pattern and the night-day blood pressure (BP) ratio for mortality and cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients without major cardiovascular disease at baseline. We performed a meta-analysis on individual data of 3468 patients from four prospective studies performed in Europe. Age of the subjects averaged 61+/-13 years; 45% were men and 61% were under antihypertensive treatment at the time of ambulatory BP monitoring. The night-day BP ratio and 24-h BP averaged, respectively, 0.907+/-0.085/0.866+/-0.095 and 138.1+/-16.4/82.3+/-11.0 mm Hg. Total follow-up time amounted to 23 164 patient-years. We used multivariable Cox regression analysis to assess the outcome of reverse dippers, non-dippers and extreme dippers vs dippers, and to assess the hazard ratios associated with 1 standard deviation higher night-day BP ratio. In comparison with dippers, and with adjustment for confounders and 24-h BP, the incidence of cardiovascular events was worse in reverse dippers (P<or=0.05), whereas mortality was lower in extreme dippers (P<or=0.01); outcome was similar in non-dippers and dippers. The systolic night-day BP ratio independently predicted all-cause mortality and cardiovascular events (P<or=0.001), which persisted after additional adjustment for 24-h BP (P<or=0.05); appropriate interaction terms indicated that the results were similar in men and women, in younger and older patients and in treated and untreated patients. In conclusion, the dipping pattern and the night-day BP ratio significantly and independently predict mortality and cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients without history of major cardiovascular disease, even after adjustment for 24-h BP. SN - 1476-5527 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19225527/Night_day_blood_pressure_ratio_and_dipping_pattern_as_predictors_of_death_and_cardiovascular_events_in_hypertension_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1038/jhh.2009.9 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -