Sowers JR, Reed J
1999 Clinical Advisory: Treatment of hypertension in diabetes
NIH/NHLBI
(Jun) 99:, 2000

The full text of this clinical advisory is reproduced from the NIH/NHLBI
website at:
This link.
1999 CLINICAL ADVISORY:
TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION AND DIABETES
James R. Sowers MD, and James Reed, MD
For the National Heart Lung Blood Institute, NIH
National High Blood Pressure Education Program (NHBPEP)
Correspondence to:
James R. Sowers, MD
Professor of Medicine and Cell Biology
Chief, Endocrinology, Diabetes And Hypertension
SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn
Representative from the American Diabetes Association
to the NHBPEP Coordinating Committee
James Reed, MD
Professor of Medicine
Director, Clinical Research Center
Morehouse School of Medicine
Representative from the International Society of Hypertension
in Blacks & the NHBPEP Coordinating Committee
The purpose of this clinical advisory update is to alert clinicians about
new information to be used in their clinical practice. Therapy in patients
with
hypertension and diabetes begins with weight reduction, increased physical
activity and moderation of salt and alcohol intake.1,2 The goal
blood pressure is 130/85 mm Hg. If it is not reached, then pharmacological
intervention is indicated.1,2 Based on clinical trial
results, 4 classes of drugs are effective first-line therapy in these
patients (Fig 1). Most hypertensive diabetic patients will require the use
of
more than one agent to achieve a therapeutic goal of 130/85.2
Because proteinuria is a harbinger for CVD and renal disease,3
ACE inhibitors may afford unique benefits in preventing CVD as well as
diabetic
nephropathy.1,2 The Appropriate Blood Pressure Control in
Diabetes
(ABCD) Trial4 showed cardioprotective effect of ACE inhibitors.
Recently, the UK Prospective Diabetes Study Group reported5,6
blood
pressure lowering with an atenolol based program was just as effective as a
captopril based regimen in reducing the incidence of diabetic complications
(both microvascular and macrovascular). Many required these drugs plus a
diuretic to achieve "tight control of 144/82 mm Hg". In patients
assigned to less tight control (154/87 mm Hg), there was less use of
multiple
antihypertensive agents. Risk reductions in the group assigned to tight
blood
pressure control were 24% in diabetes-related end points, 32% in deaths
related
to diabetes, 44% in strokes, and 37% in microvascular end points,
predominantly
diabetic retinopathy. These results suggest that combination therapy with
either an ACE inhibitor or a beta blocker are very effective in reducing
macrovascular and microvascular events providing blood pressure is
adequately
lowered.
Low dose thiazide diuretics (i.e., 25 mg or less of hydrochlorothizide or
chlorthialidone daily), are effective and safe antihypertensive agents in
type
II diabetic patients.1,2 In the Systolic Hypertension in the
Elderly
(SHEP) study, elderly type II diabetic men had reductions in stroke and
coronary heart disease similar to those without diabetes.7 Low
dose
diuretics are not associated with significant metabolic
abnormalities.1,2 Lower dose diuretics in conjunction with ACE
inhibitors usually produces substantial synergism in reducing blood
pressure,
and use of these agents together, further minimizes potential metabolic
problems. Diuretics are important because of the salt sensitivity and
expanded
plasma volume that is often present in diabetic patients8
particularly in those requiring several drugs to control blood pressure
levels
of <130/85.
Results from the subset analysis of type II diabetics in the Hypertension
Optimal Treatment (HOT) trial9 and a recent sub-analysis of this
cohort in the Sys-Eur Trial10 suggest that further reduction in
diastolic blood pressure below 85 mm Hg is beneficial. HOT also confirmed
that
multiple drug regimes are required to reach goal for most hypertensive
diabetics. In the Sys-Eur trial, while systolic blood pressure was reduced by
a
comparable amount in each group (-22±16 mm Hg, nondiabetic vs.
-22.1±14 mm Hg, diabetic group), the risk reduction in mortality from
CVD
was 13% for the nondiabetics and 76% for the diabetic patients.10
Thus, the benefit conferred per mm Hg blood pressure reduction appears to be
greater in persons with type II diabetes than in those with hypertension but
no
coexistent diabetes mellitus. Data from a large trial that was recently
reported also supported this notion.11
References
- National High Blood Pressure Education Program Working Group report on
hypertension in diabetes.Hypertension 1994;23:145-158.
- Sixth Report of the Joint National Committee on Detection, Evaluation
and
Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC-VI). Arch Int Med
1997;157:2413-2446.
- Dinneen SF, Gerstein HC. The association of microalbuminuria and
mortality
in non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. A systematic overview of the
literature. Arch Int Med 1997;157:1413-1418.
- Estacio RO, Schrier RW Antihypertensive therapy in type 2 diabetes:
implications of the appropriate blood pressure control in diabetes (ABCD)
trial. Am J Cardiol 1998; 12(9B):9R-14R.
- UKPDS Group. UK Prospective Diabetes Study 38: Tight blood pressure
control
and risk of macrovascular and microvascular complications in type 2
diabetes.
BMJ 1998;317:703-713.
- UK Prospective Diabetes Study Group. Intensive blood-glucose control
with
sulphonylureas or insulin compared with conventional treatment and risk of
complications in patients with type 2 diabetes (UKPDS 33). Lancet
1998;352:837-853.
- Curb JD, Pressel MS, Cutler JA, Applegate WB, et al. Effect of a
diuretic-based antihypertensive treatment on cardiovascular disease risk in
older diabetic patients with isolated hypertension. JAMA
1996;276:1886-1892.
- Sowers JR. Hypertension in type II diabetes: update on therapy. J
Clin
Hypertens 1999;1:41-47.
- Hansson L, Zanchetti A,Carruthers SB, Dahlof B, Elmfeldt D, Julius S,
Menard J, Rahn KH, Wedel H, Westerling S. Effects of intensive blood
pressure-lowering and low-dose aspirin in patients with hypertension:
principal
results of the Hypertension Optimal Treatment (HOT) randomized trial. HOT
Study
Group. Lancet 1998;351:1755-1762.
- Staussen JA, Fagard R, Thys L, et al., for the Systolic Hypertension-
Europe
(Syst-Eur) trial investigators. Morbidity and mortality in the
placebo-controlled European trial on isolated systolic hypertension in the
elderly. Lancet 1997;350:757-764.
- Yusuf S, Sleight P, Pogue J, Bosch J, Davies R, Dagenais G. Effects of
an
angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor, ramipril, on cardiovascular events
in
high-risk patients. The Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation Study
Investigators. N Engl J Med 2000;342(3):145-153.
Acknowledgements: The authors with to thank Ed Roccella, Marvin Moser,
Joe
Izzo and Sheldon Sheps for their thoughtful input. We also wish to thank
Paddy
McGowan for her help in preparing this update.
TREATMENT GOAL < 130/85 MM HG
Initiate Pharmacologic Selection
(in
alphabetical order) plus Lifestyle Modifications
ACE inhibitors, beta blockers, calcium antagonists, and diuretics in low
dose
are preferred because of clinical trial data/
(ACE inhibitors are drugs of choice in patients with albuminuria/
proteinuria.)
|

Inadequate Response*
 |

Inadequate Response*
 |
Add a second or third agent, one of which should be a diuretic, if not
already prescribed |
Algorithm for antihypertensive therapy in the diabetic
person.
*An adequate response means goal blood pressure achieved or considerable
progress made.