Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a common disease with substantial associated morbidity and mortality
(1, 2). Most adverse diabetes outcomes are a result of vascular complications, both at a macrovascular level (coronary artery disease, cerebrovascular disease, or peripheral vascular disease) and a microvascular level (retinopathy, nephropathy, or neuropathy)
(3). Macrovascular complications are more common; up to 80% of patients with type 2 diabetes will develop or die of macrovascular disease
(4-12), and the costs associated with macrovascular disease are an order of magnitude greater than those associated with microvascular disease
(13).
Because diabetes is defined by blood glucose levels, much of the attention in diabetes care focuses on the management of hyperglycemia. This has been magnified by the causal link between hyperglycemia and microvascular outcomes
(3, 14). However, while some observational evidence suggests that level of glycemia is a risk factor for macrovascular disease
(15-18), experimental studies to date have not clearly shown a causal relationship between improved glycemic control and reductions in serious cardiovascular outcomes
(3, 14). Given these results and the epidemiologic characteristics of diabetes complications, it would seem more logical to focus diabetes care on prevention of macrovascular complications rather than on glucose control and microvascular complications. Indeed, the importance of preventing the macrovascular complications of type 2 diabetes has started to receive greater attention. In particular, several trials have examined the benefit of management of highly prevalent risk factors, such as hypertension. Hypertension is extremely common in patients with type 2 diabetes, affecting up to 60%
(2), and there are a growing number of pharmacologic treatment options.
The goals of this paper are to review the literature to evaluate effects of management of hypertension on the complications of type 2 diabetes and, based on this literature, to determine optimal blood pressure goals and choice of agents. This will provide an evidence base to guide clinicians in setting hypertension treatment goals and priorities in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Methods
The literature review was limited to randomized, controlled trials that included patients with diabetes. Only studies that measured major clinical end points were included. We defined four classes of clinical end points: all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, major cardiovascular events (that is, myocardial infarction or stroke), and advanced microvascular outcomes (photocoagulation or visual loss, nephropathy or end-stage renal disease, neuropathy, or amputation).
We separated the literature review into two categories. The first category evaluated the effects of hypertension control if the comparison examined an antihypertensive drug versus placebo or the effects of different target blood pressure levels. The second category evaluated the effects of different classes of drugs. We used several sources to identify the relevant literature. For older literature, we started with the Cochrane Collaboration Diabetes Group report on treatment of hypertension in diabetes, which was published in 1997
(19). This report has now been withdrawn because it is out of date, but it served as a reasonable starting point to identify pre-1997 literature. We then performed a MEDLINE search in May 2000 and updated it in April 2002. We used the keywords
exp diabetes mellitus and
exp hypertension[therapy or prevention and control] and limited the search to randomized, controlled trials. The final search produced 322 results. Of these, most were discarded because they did not measure major clinical outcomes, were observational in nature, were reviews or editorials, or did not primarily address the issue of treatment of hypertension. We then updated the search through consultation with experts and through examining references from meta-analyses and review articles.
Data were extracted from the primary study reports by the primary author and were reviewed by the senior author. Accuracy and quality of the abstraction were confirmed through reabstraction and comparison with the original abstraction. The outcomes were broken into categories as described, and data on absolute and relative risk reduction and numbers needed to treat for benefit were derived from the primary reports or were calculated in standard fashion
(20).
Discussion
Studies of hypertension control in diabetes show a clear and consistent effect: Improved control of blood pressure leads to substantially reduced risks for cardiovascular events and death
(19, 21, 22, 35-37, 55). In addition, findings suggest that in patients with diabetes, aggressive hypertension control also reduces the risk for microvascular events, including end-stage functional impairment (such as decreased visual acuity and end-stage renal disease)
(33, 34, 36, 53).
The risk reduction seen with hypertension control in patients with diabetes is substantially greater than that seen in persons in the general population who have similar blood pressure levels
(35). It is also clear that blood pressure targets for patients with diabetes should be more aggressive. In the HOT study, a four-point difference in diastolic blood pressure (85 mm Hg vs. 81 mm Hg) resulted in a 50% decrease in risk for cardiovascular events in patients with diabetes
(35). In contrast, HOT study participants without diabetes received no benefit. Therefore, tight blood pressure goals should not be extended to the average nondiabetic patient with uncomplicated hypertension.
The current experimental evidence suggests that the diastolic blood pressure goal in patients with type 2 diabetes should be 80 mm Hg; ongoing studies may suggest an even lower diastolic target. Systolic target goals have not been specifically tested in trials, but a 10-point reduction in the UKPDS (154 mm Hg vs. 144 mm Hg) and a four-point reduction in the HOT trial (144 mm Hg vs. 140 mm Hg) led to substantial decreases in diabetes-related mortality and end points
(36). While the optimal level of systolic blood pressure control has not been as rigorously established, it may be reasonable to target systolic blood pressures of 135 mm Hg. We could find no evidence from randomized trials supporting the commonly recommended blood pressure goal of less than 130 mm Hg. Indeed, a less stringent goal of 140 mm Hg could be supported given the current evidence.
We caution clinicians about the need to clearly distinguish between blood pressure targets and quality standards
(56). For example, although the target diastolic blood pressure in the intensive group of the HOT study was 80 mm Hg, the mean achieved blood pressure was 81 mm Hg; thus, more than 50% of patients did not achieve the target, even in a volunteer population with intensive follow-up. Performance and quality standards should allow goals to be tempered by clinical discretion and a realization that many, or perhaps most, patients with diabetes and hypertension will not achieve aggressive goals, even while taking three or four antihypertensive agents.
Choice of initial blood pressure agent in patients with diabetes is difficult to define precisely. It could be argued, given the conflicting available evidence, that there are no obviously superior agents. It is clear, however, that most patients will require more than one blood pressure agent
(22, 35-37, 55). The weight of current evidence suggests that thiazide diuretics and angiotensin II receptor blockers, and perhaps ACE inhibitors, are reasonable first-choice agents, although angiotensin II receptor blockers and ACE inhibitors are considerably more expensive than diuretics (some ACE inhibitors are now off patent). However, high doses of thiazide diuretics can worsen important metabolic variables, including glucose and lipid levels
(57-59).
Available data suggest that angiotensin II receptor blockers have impressive benefits. They clearly reduce the risk for renal end points
(33, 34, 53), and the LIFE study suggests that they are superior to -blockers in reducing cardiovascular events and mortality, at least in patients with evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy on electrocardiography
(54). However, the evidence comparing ACE inhibitors, diuretics, and -blockers is much less definitive. Indeed, although ALLHAT found that diuretics were equivalent to ACE inhibitors for most outcomes and were superior for heart failure, the CAPPP trial found that ACE inhibitors were superior to -blockers and diuretics. The UKPDS and STOP-2 found that ACE inhibitors were equivalent to -blockers and diuretics
(40, 41, 46, 47). Some have argued for the use of ACE inhibitors as first-line agents based on the HOPE study, which showed a hypertension-independent benefit on mortality. However, these benefits were not apparent in ALLHAT, which suggests that the HOPE study may have been little more than a trial of blood pressure treatment versus placebo in high-risk patients
(23, 24, 41). Some limited evidence shows that ACE inhibitors may have hypertension-independent renoprotective effects in patients with diabetes
(25, 26, 28-32), although this is tempered by the at best inconsistent data comparing ACE inhibitors with other drugs for preventing progression of renal disease
(37, 39, 42-45, 47-50). There are as yet no long-term trials comparing angiotensin II receptor blockers with ACE inhibitors in patients with diabetes. Early data on renal outcomes appear to be equivalent
(60) and effects on intermediate end points such as blood pressure control seem to be similar, although angiotensin II receptor blockers may be slightly better tolerated
(61).
-Blockers and calcium-channel blockers have proven efficacy compared with placebo, and the evidence suggests that they are similarly efficacious
(21, 22, 40, 51, 52). There is evidence, albeit inconsistent, that diuretics, angiotensin-receptor blockers, and ACE inhibitors may be superior to these agents; thus, -blockers and calcium-channel blockers are probably best used as second- or third-line treatments for hypertension in diabetes
(38-41, 51, 52). -Blockers are safe, effective, and inexpensive and at moderate doses have relatively few side effects. However, in the UKPDS, patients taking -blockers gained more weight than those taking ACE inhibitors, and -blocker therapy was more frequently discontinued. In addition, patients taking -blockers required the addition of new glucose-lowering agents more frequently than those taking ACE inhibitors
(47). However, there is little evidence to support the common concern that -blockers increase risks for hypoglycemia or hypoglycemia unawareness.
Some data suggest that, in the general population, calcium-channel blockers may be more effective in reducing stroke than other agents, but this has not been definitively shown in patients with diabetes
(41, 62). Given the lack of clear difference in effectiveness between calcium-channel blockers and -blockers, cost and side effect profiles should be key considerations in choosing between these agents.
There is also no obvious choice of which class of calcium-channel blocker to use in patients with diabetes. The large-scale studies show no consistent distinction among classes. The NORDIL trial, which used diltiazem, and INSIGHT and STOP-2, which used dihydropyridine agents, had similar overall results. There has been some concern about the use of dihydropyridine agents in patients with type 2 diabetes and albuminuria; however, only limited and inconsistent data suggest that these agents are substantially worse than other classes of drugs
(42-45).
Other agents may have a role in achieving desired blood pressure targets in patients with type 2 diabetes. However, there is little information on the effectiveness of these drugs in reducing microvascular and macrovascular outcomes. Recent data suggest that doxazosin, an -antagonist, yields worse outcomes than thiazide diuretics in control of hypertension in the general population, although this difference may largely be due to differences in blood pressure
(62, 63). Nonetheless, in view of the proven efficacy of other agents, -blockers should be reserved for hypertension that is refractory to other agents in patients with type 2 diabetes.
One of the limitations of the current literature is a lack of strong evidence comparing the effects of blood pressure treatment according to demographic factors, such as ethnicity and age. These factors are important because ethnicity may be a strong predictor of adverse events in patients with diabetes
(64-68), and age may change relative or absolute benefits of hypertension treatment, in part because of competing risks for death
(69). Also, the effectiveness of different antihypertensive agents in blood pressure lowering may vary by ethnicity and age. For example, in ALLHAT, African-American participants did not respond to ACE inhibitors as well as other participants and had a higher risk for stroke as a result. However, it is not clear how these results relate to the population of African-American persons with diabetes
(41).
The dramatic effects of hypertension treatment in diabetes are striking and raise an important question: Where should diabetes treatment priorities lie? Because diabetes is defined by glucose levels, much of the emphasis in diabetes care has been on optimal blood glucose control. However, glucose control is clearly effective only in reducing microvascular end points, and to date only intermediate outcomes have been shown to be reduced. For example, the UKPDS showed that glycemic control reduced progression of retinopathy and photocoagulation, but after 10 years of follow-up, visual acuity, renal function, functional status, and mortality rates were not significantly improved
(3). In contrast, control of hypertension is dramatically effective in reducing risk for cardiovascular events and mortality and does so within a 4- to 6-year period
(19, 21, 22, 35, 36, 38). Furthermore, hypertension control appears to be more effective than glycemic control in reducing microvascular events (
Table 2)
(36, 70). We do not intend to suggest that glycemic control is an ineffective intervention
(70-73), but rather that treatment of hypertension should be prioritized and stressed as the most important intervention for the average population of persons with type 2 diabetes. Blood pressure targets should be 135/80 mm Hg. First-choice agents should probably be thiazide diuretics, angiotensin II receptor blockers, or ACE inhibitors, and second-choice agents should be -blockers or calcium-channel blockers. Aggressive control of blood pressure in patients with type 2 diabetes has dramatic benefits and should be the first priority in diabetes care.
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