Contribución española al estudio HOT (Hypertension Optimal Treatment). Resultados finales

1999 
BACKGROUND: The HOT study is a multicenter international trial which included 19,193 patients and whose goal was to assess the optimal target diastolic blood pressure to achieve by antihypertensive treatment. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Patients were recruited in 26 countries. Spain contributed with 806 patients (4.3%) who were randomized to achieve three target DBP: 0.001), less prevalence of tobacco consumption (p = 0.014), and a fewer number of patients with angina (p > 0.001) and myocardial infarction (p > 0.04) between the Spanish sample and the whole HOT population. The percentage of patients reaching the randomized target blood pressure was 76.5% at the end of the study. Average systolic and diastolic blood pressure reduction was 28.5 mmHg, and 23 mmHg respectively. The average number of drugs required per patient was 1.7 (57.6% needed two or more antihypertensive drugs) and the number of cardiovascular events in the Spanish population was 40 (4.96%), a similar incidence to the observed (687 events) in the whole study population (3.65%; p = 0.06). CONCLUSION: Strategies of intensive treatment with current antihypertensive drugs are capable to achieve blood pressure control in the great majority of Spanish essential hypertensive patients without significant side effects, thus being responsible for a very low rate of cardiovascular events in these patients.
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