Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people

Introduction: Since 2012 we have undertaken a programme of research into the management of hypertension in people with dementia. As part of this we are studying the feasibility of withdrawing antihypertensive drugs in people with dementia and well-controlled hypertension, with the aim of them remain...

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Main Authors: Harrison, Jennifer K., Gladman, John R.F., van der Wardt, Veronika, Conroy, Simon
Format: Article
Published: University of Nottingham 2015
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43771/
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author Harrison, Jennifer K.
Gladman, John R.F.
van der Wardt, Veronika
Conroy, Simon
author_facet Harrison, Jennifer K.
Gladman, John R.F.
van der Wardt, Veronika
Conroy, Simon
author_sort Harrison, Jennifer K.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Introduction: Since 2012 we have undertaken a programme of research into the management of hypertension in people with dementia. As part of this we are studying the feasibility of withdrawing antihypertensive drugs in people with dementia and well-controlled hypertension, with the aim of them remaining normotensive but avoiding some of the burdens and side-effects of antihypertensive medications. We decided to undertake a preliminary examination of the literature to examine the evidence and safety of antihypertensive withdrawal (not restricted to those with dementia) to determine whether this has already been extensively reviewed, to provide an approximate estimate of the likelihood of success of antihypertensive withdrawal, and to prepare for a systematic review of this literature if required and feasible. Method: For this rapid review, we undertook a search for existing reviews and examined the relevant papers identified, and briefly updated the search once we found that the most recent review was in 2008. Results: One appropriate review (from 2008) yielding seven relevant articles, and one further article were identified, giving eight articles which were examined. Seven of the eight were published more than ten years ago. Six of the eight studies had follow-up data for 1 year or longer. Successful long term (1 year or more) withdrawal of antihypertensive medication was reported in 20-52% of patients. Conclusion: Our review indicates that 22-50% of patients whose blood pressures are currently adequately controlled might be able to withdraw medication without return of long term hypertension. The rapid review approach we took may have missed articles of relevance and so we propose that a systematic review of withdrawal is undertaken. Because much of the data will be old, it should seek data not only on the proportions of patients who remained normotensive at long term follow up using the standards of the day, but should seek data on findings relevant to current guidelines. Only data reporting long term follow up (≥ 1 year) should be included. Data referring to old or discontinued medications should be distinguished.
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spelling nottingham-437712020-05-04T17:09:17Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43771/ Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people Harrison, Jennifer K. Gladman, John R.F. van der Wardt, Veronika Conroy, Simon Introduction: Since 2012 we have undertaken a programme of research into the management of hypertension in people with dementia. As part of this we are studying the feasibility of withdrawing antihypertensive drugs in people with dementia and well-controlled hypertension, with the aim of them remaining normotensive but avoiding some of the burdens and side-effects of antihypertensive medications. We decided to undertake a preliminary examination of the literature to examine the evidence and safety of antihypertensive withdrawal (not restricted to those with dementia) to determine whether this has already been extensively reviewed, to provide an approximate estimate of the likelihood of success of antihypertensive withdrawal, and to prepare for a systematic review of this literature if required and feasible. Method: For this rapid review, we undertook a search for existing reviews and examined the relevant papers identified, and briefly updated the search once we found that the most recent review was in 2008. Results: One appropriate review (from 2008) yielding seven relevant articles, and one further article were identified, giving eight articles which were examined. Seven of the eight were published more than ten years ago. Six of the eight studies had follow-up data for 1 year or longer. Successful long term (1 year or more) withdrawal of antihypertensive medication was reported in 20-52% of patients. Conclusion: Our review indicates that 22-50% of patients whose blood pressures are currently adequately controlled might be able to withdraw medication without return of long term hypertension. The rapid review approach we took may have missed articles of relevance and so we propose that a systematic review of withdrawal is undertaken. Because much of the data will be old, it should seek data not only on the proportions of patients who remained normotensive at long term follow up using the standards of the day, but should seek data on findings relevant to current guidelines. Only data reporting long term follow up (≥ 1 year) should be included. Data referring to old or discontinued medications should be distinguished. University of Nottingham 2015-07-01 Article PeerReviewed Harrison, Jennifer K., Gladman, John R.F., van der Wardt, Veronika and Conroy, Simon (2015) Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people. East Midlands Research into Ageing Network (EMRAN) Discussion Paper Series, 3 . pp. 1-18. ISSN 2059-3341 http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/emran/documents/issue-3-emran-jul-2015.pdf
spellingShingle Harrison, Jennifer K.
Gladman, John R.F.
van der Wardt, Veronika
Conroy, Simon
Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people
title Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people
title_full Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people
title_fullStr Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people
title_full_unstemmed Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people
title_short Preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people
title_sort preparatory review of studies of withdrawal of anti-hypertensive medication in older people
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43771/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43771/