Hypertension with Compelling Indications
VI. TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION IN ASSOCIATION WITH ISCHEMIC HEART DISEASE
A Recommendations for Hypertensive Patients with Coronary Artery Disease
1) An ACE inhibitor is recommended for patients with hypertension and documented coronary artery disease (Grade A).
2) For patients with stable angina, beta-blockers are preferred as initial therapy (Grade B). Long-acting CCBs may also be used (Grade B).
3) Short-acting nifedipine should not be used (Grade D).
(NEW) 4) For patients with CAD, but without coexisting systolic heart failure, the combination of an ACE inhibitor and ARB is not recommended (Grade B).
B Recommendations for Patients with Hypertension Who Have Had a Recent ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction or Non-ST Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction
1) Initial therapy should include both a beta-blocker and an ACE inhibitor (Grade A). An ARB may be used if the patient is intolerant to an ACE inhibitor (Grade A in patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction).
2) Long-acting CCBs may be used in postmyocardial infarction patients when beta-blockers are contraindicated or not effective. Nondihydropyridine CCBs should not be used when there is heart failure as evidenced by pulmonary congestion on examination or radiograph (Grade D).
VII. TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION IN ASSOCIATION WITH HEART FAILURE
1) In patients with systolic dysfunction, ACE inhibitors (Grade A) and beta-blockers (Grade A) are recommended for initial therapy. Aldosterone antagonists (Grade B) are also recommended for patients with NYHA Class III or IV symptoms of heart failure or following MI. Other diuretics are recommended as additional therapy if needed (Grade B for thiazide diuretics for blood pressure control, Grade D for loop diuretics for volume control). Beyond considerations of blood pressure control, doses of ACE inhibitors or ARBs should be titrated to those found to be effective in trials unless adverse effects are manifest (Grade B).
2) An ARB is recommended if ACE inhibitors are not tolerated (Grade A).
3) A combination of hydralazine and isosorbide dinitrate is recommended if ACE inhibitors and ARBs are contraindicated or not tolerated (Grade B).
4) For hypertensive patients with heart failure whose blood pressure is not controlled, an ARB may be added to an ACE inhibitor and other antihypertensive drug treatment (Grade A). Careful monitoring should be used if combining an ACE inhibitor and an ARB due to potential adverse effects such as hypotension, hyperkalemia and worsening renal function (Grade C). Additional therapies may also include long-acting dihydropyridine CCBs (Grade C).
VIII. TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION IN ASSOCIATION WITH CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASE
1) Strong consideration should be given to the initiation of antihypertensive therapy after the acute phase of a stroke or transient ischemic attack (Grade A).
2) Caution is indicated in deciding whether to lower blood pressure in the acute stroke situation; pharmacological agents and routes of administration should be chosen to avoid precipitous falls in blood pressure (Grade D).
3) Following the acute phase of a stroke, patients should have their blood pressure chronically controlled to a target of lower than 140/90 mm Hg (Grade C).
4) Treatment with an ACE inhibitor plus diuretic combination is preferred (Grade B).
(NEW) 5) For patients with stroke, the combination of an ACE inhibitor and ARB is not recommended (Grade B).
X. TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION IN ASSOCIATION WITH LEFT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY
1) Hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy should be treated with antihypertensive therapy to lower the rate of subsequent cardiovascular events (Grade C).
2) The choice of initial therapy can be influenced by the presence of left ventricular hypertrophy (Grade D). Initial therapy can be drug treatment using ACE inhibitors, ARBs, long-acting CCBs or thiazide diuretics. Direct arterial vasodilators such as hydralazine or minoxidil should not be used.
X. TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION IN ASSOCIATION WITH NONDIABETIC CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE
1) For patients with non-diabetic chronic kidney disease, target blood pressure is lower than 130/80 mm Hg (Grade C).
2) For patients with hypertension and proteinuric chronic kidney disease (urinary protein greater than 500 mg/24hr or albumin:creatinine ratio [ACR] greater than 30 mg/mmol), initial therapy should be an ACE inhibitor (Grade A) or an ARB if there is intolerance to ACE inhibitors (Grade B).
3) Thiazide diuretics are recommended as additive antihypertensive therapy (Grade D). For patients with chronic kidney disease and volume overload, loop diuretics are an alternative (Grade D).
(NEW) 4) The combination of an ACE inhibitor and ARB is not recommended for patients with nonproteinuric chronic kidney disease(Grade B).
XI. TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION IN ASSOCIATION WITH RENOVASCULAR DISEASE
1) Renovascular hypertension should be treated in the same manner as hypertension without compelling indications, except for caution in the use of ACE inhibitors or ARBs due to the risk of acute renal failure in bilateral disease or unilateral disease with a solitary kidney (Grade D).
2) Close follow-up and early intervention (angioplasty and stenting or surgery) should be considered for patients with uncontrolled hypertension despite therapy with three or more drugs, deteriorating kidney function, bilateral atherosclerotic renal artery lesions (or tight atherosclerotic stenosis in a single kidney) or recurrent episodes of flash pulmonary edema (Grade D).
XII. TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION IN ASSOCIATION WITH DIABETES MELLITUS
1) Persons with diabetes mellitus should be treated to attain systolic blood pressures lower than 130 mm Hg (Grade C) and diastolic blood pressure lower than 80 mm Hg (Grade A). (These target blood pressure levels are the same as the blood pressure treatment thresholds.) (NEW) Combination therapy using two first-line agents may also be considered as initial therapy of hypertensio (Grade B) if the SBP is 20 mmHg above target or the DBP is 10 mmHg above target. However, caution should be exercised in patients in whom a substantial fall in blood pressure is more likely or poorly tolerated (e.g. elderly patients, patients with autonomic nephropathy).
2) For persons with diabetes and normal urinary albumin excretion (ACR lower than 2.0 mg/mmol in men and lower than 2.8 mg/mmol in women) and without chronic kidney disease, with blood pressure 130/80 mm Hg or higher despite lifestyle interventions, any one of the following are recommended: an ACE inhibitor (Grade A for patients 55 years or older, Grade B for patients younger than 55 years), ARB (Grade A for persons with left ventricular hypertrophy and age of 55 years or older, Grade B for persons without left ventricular hypertrophy irrespective of age); a dihydropyridine CCB (Grade A for patients 55 years of age or older, Grade B for patients younger than 55 years of age), or a thiazide or a thiazide-like diuretic (Grade A for patients 55 years of age or older, Grade B for patients younger than 55 years of age) is recommended, with special consideration to the ACE inhibitor and ARB, given their additional renal benefits.
If these drugs are contraindicated or cannot be tolerated, a cardioselective beta-blocker (Grade B) or nondihydropyridine CCB (Grade B) can be substituted. Additional antihypertensive drugs should be used if target blood pressure levels are not achieved with standard dose monotherapy (Grade B). (NEW) The combination of an ACE inhibitor and ARB is not recommended in patients with diabetes and normal urinary albumin levels (Grade B).
3) For persons with diabetes and albuminuria (persistent ACR greater than 2.0 mg/mmol in men and greater than 2.8 mg/mmol in women), an ACE inhibitor or an ARB is recommended as initial therapy (Grade A). If blood pressure remains 130/80 mm Hg or higher despite lifestyle interventions and the use of an ACE inhibitor or ARB, additional antihypertensive drugs should be used to obtain target blood pressure.
4) For persons with diabetes and a normal urinary albumin excretion rate (ACR lower than 2.0 mg/mmol in men and lower than 2.8 mg/mmol in women) with no chronic kidney disease and with isolated systolic hypertension, a long-acting dihydropyridine CCB (Grade C) is an alternative initial choice to an ACE inhibitor (Grade B), ARB (Grade B), or a thiazide or a thiazide-like diuretic (Grade C).
5) Alpha-blockers are not recommended as first-line agents for the treatment of hypertension in persons with diabetes (Grade A).
XIII. CONCORDANCE STRATEGIES FOR PATIENTS
1) Adherence to an antihypertensive prescription can be improved by a multipronged approach as outlined in (Table 5).
XIV. TREATMENT OF SECONDARY HYPERTENSION DUE TO ENDOCRINE CAUSES
1) Treatment of hyperaldosteronism and pheochromocytoma are outlined in (Table 6A) and (Table 6B).