Journal of Hypertension

Home Current Issue Previous Issues Published Ahead-of-Print For Authors Journal Info
Skip Navigation LinksHome > December 1998 - Volume 16 - Issue 12 > Comparison of active treatment and placebo in older Chinese...
Journal of Hypertension:
December 1998 - Volume 16 - Issue 12 - p 1823-1829
Original article

Comparison of active treatment and placebo in older Chinese patients with isolated systolic hypertension

Liu, Lisheng; Wang, Ji Guang; Gong, Lansheng; Liu, Guozhang; Staessen, Jan A; for the Systolic Hypertension in China (Syst-China) Collaborative Group

Collapse Box

Abstract

Background: Isolated systolic hyprtension occurs in around 8% of Chinese people aged 60 years or older. In 1988, the Systolic Hypertension in China (Syst-China) Collaborative Group started to investigate whether active treatment could reduce the incidence of stroke and other cardiovascular complications in older patients with isolated systolic hypertension.

Methods: All patients were initially started on masked placebo. After stratification for centre, sex and previous cardiovascular complications, alternate patients (n = 1253) were assigned nitrendipine at 10-40 mg daily, with the addition of captopril at 12.5-50.0 mg daily or hydrochlorothiazide at 12.5-50.0 mg daily, or both, if a sufficient blood pressure fall was not obtained. In the remaining 1141 control patients, matching placebos were administered similarly.

Results: At entry, sitting blood pressure averaged 170.5 mmHg systolic and 86.0 mmHg diastolic, age averaged 66.5 years and total serum cholesterol was 5.1 mmol/l. After 2 years of follow-up, sitting systolic and diastolic blood pressures had fallen by 10.9 mmHg and 1.9 mmHg in the placebo group and by 20.0 mmHg and 5.0 mmHg in the active treatment group. The intergroup differences were 9.1 mmHg systolic (95% confidence interval 7.6-10.7 mmHg) and 3.2 mmHg diastolic (95% confidence interval 2.4-4.0). Active treatment reduced total strokes by 38% (from 20.8 to 13.0 endpoints per 1000 patient-years, P = 0.01), all-cause mortality by 39% (from 28.4 to 17.4 endpoints per 1000 patient-years, P = 0.003), cardiovascular mortality by 39% (from 15.2 to 9.4 endpoints per 1000 patient-years, P = 0.03), stroke mortality by 58% (from 6.9 to 2.9 endpoints per 1000 patient-years, P = 0.02), and all fatal and nonfatal cardiovascular endpoints by 37% (from 33.3 to 21.4 endpoints per 1000 patient-years, P = 0.004).

Conclusions: Antihypertensive treatment prevents stroke and other cardiovascular complications in older Chinese patients with isolated systolic hypertension. Treatment of 1000 Chinese patients for 5 years could prevent 55 deaths, 39 strokes or 59 major cardiovascular endpoints.

© 1998 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

You currently do not have access to this article.

You may need to:

Note: If your society membership provides for full-access to this article, you may need to login on your society’s web site first.

Article Tools

You currently do not have access to this article.

You may need to:

Note: If your society membership provides for full-access to this article, you may need to login on your society’s web site first.

Search for Similar Articles
You may search for similar articles that contain these same keywords or you may modify the keyword list to augment your search.