The document summarizes guidelines from the Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC 8) on the management of hypertension. Key recommendations include:
- For most adults aged 60 or older, initiate treatment when blood pressure is 150/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <150/90 mmHg.
- For adults aged 18-59, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- For adults with chronic kidney disease or diabetes, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- Thiazide diuretics, calcium channel blockers, ACE inhibitors
The document summarizes guidelines from the Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC 8) on the management of hypertension. Key recommendations include:
- For most adults aged 60 or older, initiate treatment when blood pressure is 150/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <150/90 mmHg.
- For adults aged 18-59, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- For adults with chronic kidney disease or diabetes, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- Thiazide diuretics, calcium channel blockers, ACE inhibitors
The document summarizes guidelines from the Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC 8) on the management of hypertension. Key recommendations include:
- For most adults aged 60 or older, initiate treatment when blood pressure is 150/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <150/90 mmHg.
- For adults aged 18-59, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- For adults with chronic kidney disease or diabetes, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- Thiazide diuretics, calcium channel blockers, ACE inhibitors
The document summarizes guidelines from the Eighth Joint National Committee (JNC 8) on the management of hypertension. Key recommendations include:
- For most adults aged 60 or older, initiate treatment when blood pressure is 150/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <150/90 mmHg.
- For adults aged 18-59, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- For adults with chronic kidney disease or diabetes, initiate treatment at 140/90 mmHg or higher and treat to a goal of <140/90 mmHg.
- Thiazide diuretics, calcium channel blockers, ACE inhibitors
Ashley Lawrance, Pharm.D. PGY1 Pharmacy Practice Resident Peninsula Regional Medical Center Salisbury, MD
Learning Objectives Describe updated recommendations for blood pressure control from JNC 8 panel members in the 2014 Evidence-Based Guideline for the Management of High Blood Pressure in Adults
Compare these updated recommendations for target blood pressure goals with: ! The seventh report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure ! Other national and international organization guidelines on hypertension
Identify controversies surrounding the 2014 update on hypertension management Develop treatment plan for patients with hypertension utilizing recommendations from the 2014 update on hypertension management Case 1 DB, a 38 y/0 African American female with stage III chronic kidney disease, presents to her primary care physician with persistently elevated blood pressure despite initiating life style changes about 3 months ago. Her blood pressure during todays visit was 156/98. The physician has decided to initiate an antihypertensive agent for DB. He is thinking of sending DB home with a prescription for Lisinopril 5 mg to be titrated and consults you for recommendations. Is Lisinopril an appropriate option? If not, what agent do you recommend for DB?
Case 2 PL is a 61 yr old Caucasian male who has recently suffered from an ischemic stroke. His current blood pressure 168/95 and he has not been on blood pressure medications before. The physician would like to start PL on antihypertensive medications. Which of the following agents do you recommend for PL? A. Hydrocholorthiazide + ramipril B. Chlorthalidone alone C. Metoprolol + losartan D. Diltiazem alone High Blood Pressure Defined as an abnormal elevation of blood pressure ! "140/90 1 in 3 adults in the US have hypertension Only about 47% of people with hypertension have it controlled Prevalence by age: ! ! 45 years ! men > women ! 45-64 years ! men = women ! " 65 years ! men < women Prevalence by Race ! African Americans 44.3% ! Mexican Americans 28.4% ! Caucasians 32.6% Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. High Blood Pressure. http://www.cdc.gov/bloodpressure/facts.htm Causes of High Blood Pressure Essential hypertension
Adults 18 years or older with HTN Implement lifestyle modifications Not at goal BP (<140/90 or < 130/90 for patients with diabetes or CKD) Initial Drug Choices No compelling Indications (Target: <140/90) Stage 1 HTN: Thiazide #1, may consider ACEI/ARB/BB/ CCB or combo Stage 2 HTN: 2- drug combo for most, thiazide + ACEI/ARB/BB/ CCB Compelling Indications (Target:<140/90 or <130/80 if DM or CKD) DM: ACEI/ ARB #1 (may add diuretic, BB, CCB) CKD: ACEI/ ARB MI: BB, then add ACEI/ ARB (may add Aldo ANT) HF: Diuretic + ACEI, then add BB (may add Aldo ANT or ARB) CAD: BB, then add ACEI/ ARB (may add CCB or diuretic) Stroke: diuretic + ACEI JNC 7 Summary Algorithm JNC 8 Course of Development March 2008 the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) established the panel for the Eighth Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC 8)
January 2013, the guideline was submitted for external peer review to 20 reviewers with expertise in hypertension, primary care, cardiology, nephrology, and other important related fields. (Comments reviewed by the Panel from March through June 2013)
June 2013, NHLBI withdrew from process ! Instead partner with selected organizations: American Heart Association (AHA), the American College of Cardiology (ACC) ! August 2013, process to release guidelines under the auspices of the AHA and ACC failed Panel elected to pursue publication as an independent panel (December 2013)
Questions Guiding JNC 8 1. In adults with hypertension, does initiating antihypertensive pharmacologic therapy at specific blood pressure thresholds improve health outcomes? 2. In adults with hypertension, does treatment with antihypertensive pharmacologic therapy to a specified blood pressure goal lead to improvements in health outcomes? 3. In adults with hypertension, do various antihypertensive drugs or drug classes differ in comparative benefits and harms on specific health outcomes? Classification of Recommendations Based on critical review of high quality randomized controlled trials Classification of recommendations: ! (A) Strong Recommendation: high certainty based on evidence that the net benefit is substantial
! (B) Moderate Recommendation: moderate certainty based on evidence that the net benefit is moderate to substantial
! (C) Weak Recommendation: at least moderate certainty based on evidence that there is a small net benefit ! (D) Recommendation against: at least modest certainty based on evidence that there is no net benefit or that risks/harms outweigh benefits
! (E) Expert Opinion: Net benefit is unclear because there is insufficient evidence but this is what the committee recommends. Further research is necessary. Summary of Recommendations General Population " 60 yrs ! Initiate Tx at BP " 150/90 mmHg (Grade A) ! Target BP < 150/90 mmHg (Grade A) ! Corollary: if BP achieved is lower than target and well tolerated, no adjustments needed to Tx (Grade E)
General Population < 60 yrs ! Initiate Tx at BP " 140/90 mmHg ! Target BP < 140/90 mmHg ! Diastolic goal: (30-59 years! Grade A; 18-29 years! Grade E) ! Systolic goal: (Grade E) Population " 18 yrs with CKD or DM ! Initiate Tx at BP " 140/90 (Grade E) ! Target BP < 140/90 (Grade E) Summary of Recommendations General nonblack population DM ! Initial Tx should include thiazide-type diuretic, CCB, ACEI, or ARB (Grade B)
General black population DM ! Initial Tx should include a thiazide-type duretic or CCB (General black population !Grade B; black population w/DM! Grade C)
Entire population " 18 yrs with CKD ! Initial or add-on Tx should include an ACEI or ARB (Grade B) Summary of Recommendations If BP goal not reached within 1 mo of Tx, increase dose of initial drug or add a second agent ! If goal still not reached with two agents titrated up, third agent from the recommended list (i.e. thiazide- type diuretic, CCB, ACEI/ARB)may be added ! Following third agent, if goal still not reached, refer to a specialist. ! Can add antihypertensive agents from other classes ! Do not use ACEI and ARB together JNC 8: Update Summary Algorithm JAMA. 2014;311(5):507-520. doi:10.1001/jama.2013.284427 AHA/ACC/CDC Science Advisory Go A S et al. Hypertension. 2014;63:878-885 Response to JNC 8: Minority Report Minority (5/17) of the panel disagreed with recommendation to increase target SBP from 140 to 150 mm Hg in persons > 60 years without DM or CKD.
1. Reduce intensity of antihypertensive treatment in groups at highest risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) ! African Americans ! Patients with CVD ! Patients with multiple CVD risk factors other than DM or CKD 2. Evidence supporting increase was insufficient and inconsistent with the evidence supporting other recommendations 3. The higher SBP goal may reverse the decades-long decline in CVD, especially stroke mortality. Other Controversies No longer sanctioned by NHLBI or other agencies like AHA and ACC
Discrepancies and lack of consensus between guidelines Raising target BP in highest risk group for CDV disease (age > 60) may lead to greater events
Case 1 DB, a 38 y/0 African American female with stage III chronic kidney disease, presents to her primary care physician with persistently elevated blood pressure despite initiating life style changes about 3 months ago. Her blood pressure during todays visit was 156/98. The physician has decided to initiate an antihypertensive agent for DB. He is thinking of sending DB home with a prescription for Lisinopril 5 mg to be titrated and consults you for recommendations. Is Lisinopril an appropriate option? If not, what agent do you recommend for DB?
61 y/o with recent stroke Case 2 PL is a 61 yr old Caucasian male who has recently suffered from an ischemic stroke. His current blood pressure 168/95 and he has not been on blood pressure medications before. The physician would like to start PL on antihypertensive medications. Which of the following agents do you recommend for PL? A. Hydrocholorthiazide + ramipril B. Chlorthalidone alone C. Metoprolol + losartan D. Diltiazem alone