Hypertension Control, Apparent Treatment Resistance, and Outcomes in The Elderly Population With Chronic Kidney Disease
Hypertension Control, Apparent Treatment Resistance, and Outcomes in The Elderly Population With Chronic Kidney Disease
Hypertension Control, Apparent Treatment Resistance, and Outcomes in The Elderly Population With Chronic Kidney Disease
CESP, Inserm UMR1018 Team 5, University of Paris-Sud, UVSQ, University Paris-Saclay, Villejuif, France; 2Inserm, UMR1219
Population Health, Bordeaux, France; 3University of Bordeaux, UMR1219, Bordeaux, France; 4Clinical Investigation Center
Clinical Epidemiology 1401, Bordeaux, France; 5Inserm U1061, Montpellier, France; 6University Montpellier I, Montpellier,
France; and 7Division of Nephrology, Ambroise Par University Hospital, APHP, Boulogne-Billancourt, France
Introduction: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is often associated with poor hypertension control and
treatment resistance, but whether CKD modies the effect of hypertension control on outcomes is
unknown.
Methods: We studied 10-year mortality and cardiovascular events according to hypertension control
status and CKD (glomerular ltration rate <60 ml/min/1.73m2) in 4262 community-dwelling individuals
(40% men) more than 65 years of age.
Results: At baseline, 19% had CKD, and 31.2% had controlled hypertension on #3 antihypertensive drugs,
62.3% uncontrolled hypertension $140/90 mm Hg on #2 drugs, and 6.5% apparent treatment-resistant
hypertension (aTRH) $140/90 mm Hg with $3 drugs or use of $4 drugs regardless of level. There were
1115 deaths (305 total cardiovascular deaths) and 274 incident nonfatal or fatal strokes or coronary events.
Compared to the reference group (controlled hypertension and no CKD), participants without CKD and
with uncontrolled hypertension or aTRH had adjusted hazard ratios for all-cause mortality of 0.86
(0.741.01) and 1.09 (0.821.46), and those with CKD and controlled or uncontrolled hypertension, or
aTRH, of 1.33 (1.061.68), 1.14 (0.931.39), and 1.34 (0.981.85), respectively. Participants with aTRH and
CKD had a risk of coronary death more than 3 times higher than that of the reference group; participants
with aTHR, with or without CKD, had a risk of stroke more than twice as high, and those with CKD but
controlled hypertension a 2 times higher risk for cardiovascular deaths from other causes.
Discussion: CKD does not appear to amplify the risk of stroke and coronary events associated with aTRH in
this older population. The reasons for excess cardiovascular mortality from other causes associated with
controlled hypertension require further study.
Kidney Int Rep (2016) -, --; http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ekir.2016.10.006
KEYWORDS: cardiovascular; chronic kidney disease; hypertension
2016 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BYNC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
CLINICAL RESEARCH
digital electronic sphygmomanometer with an appropriately sized cuff on the right arm (OMRON M4;
OMRON Corp., Kyoto, Japan).26 The mean of these 2 BP
measurements was used in the analyses.
Hypertension was dened as controlled if the
mean systolic and diastolic BP were <140 mm Hg
and <90 mm Hg, respectively, for participants taking
1 to 3 antihypertensive drug classes (cHT), and as
uncontrolled, but nonresistant, if it was $140 mm Hg
and/or $90 mm Hg with 2 drugs (ucHT); apparent
treatment-resistant hypertension (aTRH) was dened
as BP of $140 mm Hg and/or $90 mm Hg in participants receiving $3 antihypertensive drug classes or
$ 4, regardless of BP level.27,28 In sensitivity analyses,
we dened aTRH including the use of diuretics as a
criterion as follows: BP of $140/90 mm Hg in participants receiving $3 antihypertensive drug classes,
1 of them a diuretic, or $4, regardless of BP level;
consequently, the denition for uncontrolled hypertension changed for BP of $140/90 mm Hg with
2 drugs or with 3 drugs excluding a diuretic,
whereas that for controlled hypertension remained
unchanged.27
Study Outcomes
We studied both all-cause and cardiovascular mortality, overall and by cause: stroke, coronary heart disease, other cardiovascular causes (including heart
failure, strict sudden death, myocardiopathy, unlocalized aneurysm, and other cardiovascular deaths) as well
as incident fatal and nonfatal stroke and coronary
events. In addition, we investigated risk for recurrent
strokes and coronary events among participants with a
history of these diseases at baseline. All participants
were actively followed up to assess 10-year mortality,
and only 9 individuals were lost to follow-up. An
adjudication committee analyzed and conrmed the
causes of death based on all available clinical information collected from hospitalization reports and interviews with the participants family physician or
specialists, nursing home staff (for participants who
entered in nursing home during follow-up), or proxy.29
Detailed denitions of the study endpoints have been
published elsewhere.25 Two adjudication committees,
one for coronary events and another for strokes, validated coding of myocardial infarction, sudden death,
and stroke and classied each event according to the
International Classication of Diseases10th Edition
(ICD-10).25 Coronary events included denite hospitalized angina, denite myocardial infarction, denite
cardiovascular death, coronary balloon dilatation, and
coronary artery bypass. Stroke was considered when a
new focal neurological decit of sudden or rapid onset
was diagnosed and attributable to a cerebrovascular
Kidney International Reports (2016) -, --
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Figure 1. Flowchart of the study participants. BP, blood pressure; CHD, coronary heart disease.
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Table 1. Participant baseline characteristics according to CKD and hypertension control status
Without CKD (n [ 3450)
Baseline characteristic
cHT
n [ 1077
ucHT
n [ 2194
aTRH
n [ 179
cHT
n [ 253
ucHT
n [ 463
aTRH
n [ 96
P valuea
74.4 5.3
74.6 5.4
75.1 5.6
76.9 5.8
77.7 5.8
77.9 6.1
<0.001
Men
31.8
43.6
46.9
32.8
37.4
44.8
<0.001
20.7
20.8
24.6
17.8
24.6
16.7
0.170
34.3
40.2
43.6
37.9
37.8
43.8
0.016
17.2
17.5
29.1
17.4
17.1
27.1
<0.001
Hypercholesterolemia
57.4
57.2
56.4
67.6
58.3
62.5
0.047
Diabetesb
11.0
14.3
31.3
9.5
10.8
29.2
<0.001
Age, yr
13.2
10.5
24.6
18.2
12.1
32.3
<0.001
79.4 13.2
79.0 12.7
79.8 14.6
50.3 8.2
50.8 7.9
48.1 8.7
<0.001
129 (121135)
157 (148170)
159 (149175)
130 (122135)
157 (148172)
167 (151179)
75 (6980)
87 (8094)
86 (8093)
73 (6780)
86 (7993)
85 (7991)
5 (47)
5 (37)
7 (69)
6 (48)
5 (47)
7 (69)
1 class
66.5
68.5
50.2
57.0
2 classes
28.1
31.5
37.9
42.9
3 classes
5.4
History of CVD
eGFR, ml/min/1.73m2c
Blood pressure, mm Hg
$4 classes
89.9
9.1
11.8
79.2
20.8
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Table 2. Crude mortality rates and adjusted hazard ratios for all-cause and cardiovascular deaths according to CKD and hypertension control
status
Mortality
Person-years
Events
4262
33,904
1115
32.9 [31.034.9]
Adjusted HR
[95% CI]a
All-cause
All participants
P for interactionb
0.95
Without CKD
cHT (Ref)
1077
8778
260
29.6 [26.233.4]
ucHT
2194
17,758
480
27.0 [24.729.5]
0.86 [0.741.01]
aTRH
179
1368
59
43.1 [33.155.2]
1.09 [0.821.46]
With CKD
cHT
253
1867
100
53.5 [43.864.8]
1.33 [1.061.68]
ucHT
463
3476
170
48.9 [42.056.7]
1.14 [0.931.39]
aTRH
96
656
46
70.1 [51.992.6]
1.34 [0.981.85]
4262
33,904
305
9.0 [8.010.0]
All cardiovascularc
All participants
0.68
Without CKD
cHT (Ref)
1077
8778
68
7.7 [6.19.8]
ucHT
2194
17,758
119
6.7 [5.68.0]
0.82 [0.601.11]
aTRH
179
1368
21
15.4 [9.823]
1.34 [0.812.23]
With CKD
cHT
253
1867
33
17.7 [12.424.5]
1.63 [1.072.48]
ucHT
463
3476
49
14.1 [10.618.5]
1.28 [0.871.87]
aTRH
96
656
15
22.8 [13.336.7]
1.56 [0.882.77]
4262
33,904
79
2.3 [1.92.9]
0.21
Without CKD
cHT (Ref)
1077
8778
15
1.7 [1.02.7]
ucHT
2194
17,758
36
2.0 [1.42.8]
1.01 [0.541.88]
aTRH
179
1368
2.2 [0.65.9]
0.71 [0.22.53]
With CKD
cHT
253
1867
2.7 [1.05.9]
1.10 [0.403.07]
ucHT
463
3476
12
3.5 [1.95.8]
1.36 [0.622.99]
aTRH
96
656
12.2 [5.723.0]
3.27 [1.347.99]
0.07
4262
33,904
188
5.5 [4.86.4]
Without CKD
cHT (Ref)
1077
8778
44
5.0 [3.76.7]
ucHT
2194
17,758
63
3.5 [2.84.5]
0.70 [0.471.04]
aTRH
179
1368
16
11.7 [7.018.5]
1.69 [0.933.08]
With CKD
cHT
253
1867
26
13.9 [9.320.1]
1.94 [1.183.18]
ucHT
463
3476
33
9.5 [6.713.2]
1.37 [0.862.19]
aTRH
96
656
9.1 [3.818.8]
1.02 [0.432.42]
aTRH, apparent treatment-resistant hypertension (systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure $140 and/or $90 while taking $3 antihypertensive drugs or number of antihypertensive
drugs $4); CHD, coronary heart diseases; cHT, controlled hypertension; CKD, chronic kidney disease (dened as estimated glomerular ltration rate <60 ml/min/1.73m2; cHT: systolic
and diastolic blood pressure <140/90 mm Hg while taking 13 antihypertensive drugs); HR, hazard ratio; IR, incidence rate; ucHT, uncontrolled hypertension (defined as systolic and/or
diastolic blood pressure $140 and/or $90 while taking 1 or 2 antihypertensive drugs).
a
All models were adjusted for center, sex, diabetes (defined as use of antidiabetic medication or fasting glycemia $7.2 mmol/L or nonfasting glycemia $11 mmol/l), history of cardiovascular events, body mass index, hypercholesterolemia, smoking status, and education level.
b
All interaction between hypertension control status and chronic kidney disease.
c
All cardiovascular mortality included deaths from stroke, coronary heart disease, strict sudden death, heart failure, and other cardiovascular deaths.
d
Cardiovascular deaths other than stroke or coronary heart disease included heart failure, strict sudden death, myocardiopathy, unlocalized aneurysm, and other cardiovascular deaths.
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Table 3. Crude incidence rates and adjusted hazard ratios for rst fatal and nonfatal stroke or coronary heart disease according to CKD and
hypertension control status
Baseline characteristic
Stroke or coronary heart disease
All participants
Person-years
Events
3223
23,245
349
15 [13.516.7]
P for interactionb
0.74
Without CKD
cHT
786
5872
75
12.8 [10.115.9]
ucHT
1745
12,650
194
15.3 [13.317.6]
1.01 [0.771.32]
aTRH
113
762
20
26.2 [16.539.7]
1.50 [0.902.47]
cHT
168
1184
15
12.7 [7.420.4]
0.91 [0.521.59]
ucHT
356
2405
38
15.8 [11.421.4]
0.95 [0.641.42]
aTRH
55
370
18.9 [8.437.1]
0.98 [0.452.15]
3858
28,284
178
6.3 [5.47.3]
With CKD
Stroke
All participants
0.87
Without CKD
cHT
970
7354
31
4.2 [2.95.9]
ucHT
2034
15,071
103
6.8 [5.68.3]
1.51 [1.002.28]
aTRH
157
1088
12
11.0 [618.7]
2.33 [1.184.61]
cHT
219
1535
5.2 [2.59.8]
1.08 [0.492.35]
ucHT
404
2750
18
6.5 [4.010.1]
1.27 [0.702.29]
aTRH
74
485
12.4 [5.125.5]
2.12 [0.875.17]
3393
24,588
225
9.2 [8.010.4]
With CKD
0.68
Without CKD
cHT
829
6305
50
8.1 [6.010.5]
ucHT
1821
13,449
121
9.1 [7.610.8]
0.92 [0.651.28]
aTRH
124
861
12
14.0 [7.723.8]
1.14 [0.592.17]
cHT
175
1263
10
8.0 [4.114.2]
0.94 [0.471.86]
ucHT
380
2625
24
9.3 [6.113.6]
0.89 [0.541.47]
aTRH
64
403
19.9 [9.437.5]
1.69 [0.793.62]
With CKD
aTRH, apparent treatment-resistant hypertension (dened as systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure $140 and/or $90 while taking $3 antihypertensive drugs or number of antihypertensive drugs $4); cHT, controlled hypertension (dened as systolic and diastolic blood pressure <140/90 mm Hg while taking 13 antihypertensive drugs); CKD, chronic kidney
disease (dened as estimated glomerular ltration rate < 60 mL/min/1.73m2); HR, hazard ratio; IR, incidence rate; ucHT, uncontrolled hypertension (defined as systolic and/or diastolic
blood pressure $140 and/or $90 while taking 1 or 2 antihypertensive drugs).
a
All models were adjusted for center, sex, diabetes, history of cardiovascular events, body mass index, hypercholesterolemia, smoking status and education level.
b
All interaction between hypertension control status and chronic kidney disease.
c
Combined incident fatal and nonfatal stroke or coronary heart disease: defined as the first occurrence of stroke or coronary heart disease, whichever occurred first. (Participants with
history of stroke and/or coronary heart disease, stroke, or coronary heart disease were excluded when estimating the risk for combined fatal and nonfatal incident stroke or coronary
heart disease, incident stroke, and incident coronary heart disease respectively).
DISCUSSION
In this community-dwelling elderly population, participants with CKD had an overall higher risk of allcause and cardiovascular mortality, regardless of their
hypertension control status. As expected, both aTRH
and uncontrolled hypertension were associated with
higher risks of incident stroke, apparently unmodied
by CKD; participants with both CKD and aTRH also
had signicantly higher risks of coronary death and of
combined recurrent stroke or coronary events. The
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Table 4. Crude incidence rates and adjusted hazard ratios for recurrent fatal or nonfatal stroke or coronary heart disease according to CKD and
hypertension control status
Number
Person-years
Events
898
5373
204
38.0 [33.043.5]
cHT
245
1554
50
32.2 [24.242.1]
ucHT
404
2492
94
37.7 [30.745.9]
1.08 [0.761.53]
aTRH
59
381
21.0 [9.939.6]
0.60 [0.281.29]
cHT
66
352
13
36.9 [20.761.3]
1.10 [0.592.06]
ucHT
89
434
25
57.6 [38.283.6]
1.70 [1.042.80]
aTRH
35
159
14
87.8 [50.3143.3]
2.15 [1.163.98]
235
1381
32
23.2 [16.132.3]
cHT
59
377
15.9 [6.632.8]
ucHT
106
636
16
25.2 [15.039.9]
Not estimated
aTRH
14
90
11.1 [1.051.8]
Not estimated
Baseline characteristics
Stroke or coronary heart disease
All participants
P for interactionb
0.10
Without CKD
With CKD
Stroke
All participants
Without CKD
With CKD
cHT
10
49
Not estimated
Not estimated
ucHT
34
165
42.3 [18.983.1]
Not estimated
aTRH
12
64
31.0 [6.299.4]
Not estimated
714
4379
143
32.7 [27.638.3]
cHT
198
1270
38
29.9 [21.540.6]
ucHT
322
2063
64
31 [24.139.3]
1.00 [0.661.52]
aTRH
48
310
12.9 [4.330.7]
0.40 [0.141.15]
cHT
59
322
12
37.3 [20.463.1]
1.25 [0.642.43]
ucHT
61
299
16
53.4 [31.884.7]
1.98 [1.083.64]
aTRH
26
114
78.5 [38.8143.2]
2.04 [0.954.37]
0.13
Without CKD
With CKD
aTRH, apparent treatment-resistant hypertension (dened as systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure $140 and/or $90 while taking $3 antihypertensive drugs or number of antihypertensive drugs $4); cHT, controlled hypertension (dened as systolic and diastolic blood pressure <140/90 mm Hg while taking 13 antihypertensive drugs); CKD, chronic kidney
disease (dened as estimated glomerular ltration rate <60 mL/min/1.73m2); HR, hazard ratio; IR, incidence rate; ucHT, uncontrolled hypertension (systolic and/or diastolic blood
pressure $140 and /or $90 while taking 1 or 2 antihypertensive drugs).
a
All models were adjusted for center, sex, diabetes, body mass index, hypercholesterolemia, smoking status, and education level.
b
All interactions between hypertension control status and chronic kidney disease.
c
Combined fatal and nonfatal stroke and CHD: defined as the recurrence of either a stroke or CHD.
CLINICAL RESEARCH
level at baseline reects the hearts compromised capacity to maintain an adequate ejection fraction
and thus makes it easier to achieve BP control. The
frequency of heart failure due to nonischemic heart
disease increases as CKD progresses. Coronary atherosclerosis is the most common cause of death in the
general population, but not among patients with CKD.
In this population, decreased cardiac perfusion of
various causes and diffuse interstitial myocardial
brosis with increased oxygen diffusion distance are
the major causes of congestive heart failure, arrhythmia,
and sudden cardiac death.43,44 Moreover, other factors
such as concomitant diabetes, electrolyte shifts, divalent ion abnormalities, sympathetic overactivity,
impaired baroreex effectiveness, inammation, infection, and inappropriate drug use also contribute to the
higher risk of mortality in patients with CKD.4346
Thus, we cannot exclude the possibility that participants with CKD and controlled hypertension at baseline
had low BP due to incipient heart failure.
Major strengths of this study include its large sample size and the low number of participants lost to
follow-up for mortality. In addition, standardized BP
was measured by trained nurses during in-home
examination in the majority of participants, which
lessens the risk of white-coat hypertension. Home BP
monitoring has been shown to be superior to ofce BP
in predicting target organ damage and all-cause mortality47 and functional decline in elderly individuals.48
Moreover, creatinine measurements were taken in a
single laboratory with further calibration to the IDMS
reference method, and long-term follow-up and adjudication of cardiovascular events. Of note, we used the
MDRD equation with which eGFR was normally
distributed, in contrast to the CKD-EPI equation in this
elderly population. Previous analyses showed that both
equations provided similar prevalence estimates of
CKD8 and similar hazard ratios of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality associated with CKD.30
Our study also has limitations. First, we included
only elderly participants, precluding extrapolation to
other age groups. Second, as treatment adherence and
ambulatory BP data were not available, true treatmentresistant hypertension may have been misclassied
with pseudo-resistance in a number of cases. Third,
albuminuria was not available at baseline and therefore
could not be adjusted for in the multivariable analyses
or used in the denition of CKD. Fourth, we may have
lacked statistical power in some of the associations
studied, particularly for stroke events. There was also a
signicant loss to follow-up for stroke and coronary
events, with the ensuing potential selection bias.
Finally, the observational design of the study makes
causal interpretation impossible.
9
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The Three-City Study is conducted under a partnership
agreement between the Institut National de la Sant and la
Recherche Mdicale (INSERM), the Victor Segalen
Bordeaux II University, and Sano-Aventis. The Fondation
pour la Recherche Mdicale funded the preparation and
initiation of the study. The Fondation Plan Alzheimer partly
funded the follow-up of the study. The 3C Study is also
supported by the Caisse Nationale Maladie des Travailleurs Salaris, Direction Gnrale de la Sant, MGEN,
Institut de la Longvit, Conseils Rgionaux of Aquitaine
and Bourgogne, Fondation de France, and Ministry of
ResearchINSERM Programme Cohortes et collections de
donnes biologiques. The study also received a grant
from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR). The
CKD ancillary study at the 4-year follow-up was funded by
the French-speaking Society of Nephrology. No donors
played a role in the design and the conduct of the study.
Jean Kabor is supported by a research grant from the
French Ministry of Research.
We thank Jo-Ann Cahn for editing the English version.
10
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
Table S1. Crude mortality rates and adjusted hazard ratios
for all-cause and cardiovascular deaths according to
chronic kidney disease and hypertension control status
Table S2. Crude incidence rates and adjusted hazard ratios
for stroke and coronary heart disease according to chronic
kidney disease and hypertension control status
Table S3. Crude incidence rates and adjusted hazard ratios
for recurrent stroke and coronary heart disease according
to chronic kidney disease and hypertension control status
Supplementary material is linked to the online version of
the paper at http://www.kireports.org.
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