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Intensive Blood Pressure Management May Reduce the Risk of MCI

Data suggest that antihypertensive agents may be disease-modifying therapies for cerebrovascular dementia.
Neurology Reviews. 2018 September;26(9):1, 38

CHICAGO—Lowering systolic blood pressure to a target of 120 mm Hg or less in people with cardiovascular risk factors reduces the risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) by 19% and reduces the risk of probable all-cause dementia by 17%, compared with achieving a less intensive target of lower than 140 mm Hg, according to research presented at AAIC 2018.

The class of antihypertensive did not affect the association. Generic drugs were as effective as branded drugs. Antihypertensive agents provided equal benefits to men, women, whites, blacks, and Hispanics. Furthermore, maintaining systolic blood pressure at 120 mm Hg or lower prevented MCI as well in patients older than 75 as it did in younger patients.

Jeff D. Williamson, MD, Chief of Geriatric Medicine at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, presented the results of the four-year SPRINT MIND study. Strict blood pressure control (ie, a systolic target of 120 mm Hg or lower) for 3.2 years reduced the incidence of MCI to a greater extent than any amyloid-targeting investigational drug has done.

“This is the first disease-modifying strategy to reduce the risk of MCI,” said Dr. Williamson. Although the effect of strict blood pressure control on the primary end point (ie, a 17% risk reduction for probable all-cause dementia) was not statistically significant, “it is comforting to see that the benefit went in the same direction and was of the same magnitude,” said Dr. Williamson. “Three years of treatment and 3.2 years of follow-up absolutely reduced the risk.”

Brain imaging underscored the clinical importance of this finding and showed its physiologic pathway. Participants who underwent strict blood pressure control had 18% fewer white matter hyperintensities after four years of follow-up than other participants.

The results may represent a step forward in a field that has seen few of them recently. Generic antihypertensive agents can be inexpensive. They are widely available and confer benefits not only on cardiovascular health, but on kidney health as well, said Dr. Williamson.

“Hypertension is a highly prevalent condition…. The 19% overall risk reduction for MCI will have a huge impact,” he added.

“The most we can say right now is that we are able to reduce risk,” said Maria Carrillo, PhD, Chief Scientific Officer of the Alzheimer’s Association, in an interview. “Reducing the risk of MCI by 19% will have a huge impact on dementia overall. Slowing down the disease progress is a disease modification, versus developing symptoms. So, if that is the definition we are using, then I would say yes, it is disease modifying,” for dementias arising from cerebrovascular pathology.

A Substudy of the SPRINT Trial

SPRINT MIND was a substudy of the Hypertension Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT). It compared two strategies for managing hypertension in older adults. The intensive strategy had a target systolic blood pressure of less than 120 mm Hg, and the standard care strategy had a target of less than 140 mm Hg. SPRINT showed that intensive blood pressure control reduced the risk of cardiovascular events, stroke, and cardiovascular death by 30%. The study results helped inform the 2017 American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology clinical guidelines for treating high blood pressure.