Tight blood pressure control and risk of macrovascular and microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes: UKPDS 38
Tight blood pressure control and risk of macrovascular and microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes: UKPDS 38
Objective: to determine whether tight control of blood pressure prevents macrovascular and microvascular complications in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Design: randomised controlled trial comparing tight control of blood pressure aiming at a blood pressure of < 150/85 mm Hg (with the use of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor captopril or a β blocker atenolol as main treatment) with less tight control aiming at a blood pressure of < 180/105 mm Hg.
Setting: 20 hospital based clinics in England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Subjects: 1148 hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes (mean age 56, mean blood pressure at entry 160/94 mm Hg); 758 patients were allocated to tight control of blood pressure and 390 patients to less tight control with a medial follow up of 8.4 years.
Main outcome measures: predefined clinical end points, fatal and non-fatal, related to diabetes, deaths related to diabetes, and all cause mortality. Surrogate measures of microvascular disease included urinary albumin excretion and retinal photography.
Results: mean blood pressure during follow up was significantly reduced in the group assigned tight blood pressure control (144/82 mm Hg) compared with the group assigned to less tight control (154/87 mm Hg) (P < 0.0001). Reductions in risk in the group assigned to tight control compared with that assigned to less tight control were 24% in diabetes related end points (95% confidence interval 8% to 38%) (P = 0.0046), 32% in deaths related to diabetes (6% to 51%) (P = 0.019), 44% in strokes (11% to 65%) (P = 0.013), and 37% in microvascular end points (11% to 56%) (P = 0.0092), predominantly owing to a reduced risk of retinal photocoagulation. There was a non-significant reduction in all cause mortality. After nine years of follow up the group assigned to tight blood pressure control also had a 34% reduction in risk in the proportion of patients with deterioration of retinopathy by two steps (99% confidence interval 11% to 50%) (P = 0.0004) and a 47% reduced risk (7% to 70%) (P = 0.004) of deterioration in visual acuity by three lines of the early treatment of diabetic retinopathy study (ETDRS) chart. After nine years of follow up 29% of patients in the group assigned to tight control required three or more treatments to lower blood pressure to achieve target blood pressures.
Conclusion: tight blood pressure control in patients with hypertension and type 2 diabetes achieves a clinically important reduction in the risk of deaths related to diabetes, complications related to diabetes, progression of diabetic retinopathy, and deterioration in visual acuity.
703-713
Turner, R.
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Holman, R.
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Stratton, I.
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Cull, C.
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Frighi, V.
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Manley, S.
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Matthews, D.
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Neil, A.
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McElroy, H.
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Kohner, E.
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Fox, C.
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Hadden, D.
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Wright, D.
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12 September 1998
Turner, R.
9c4a3b92-5186-43ae-b750-08990e742e4e
Holman, R.
336fb2f7-edb5-4d65-a7b0-465111cbd047
Stratton, I.
772f25b9-23c0-4240-a3f6-1e76b03b172f
Cull, C.
ae95233f-ce25-4c32-a5b9-368419e07826
Frighi, V.
d6233dc7-5151-4bd7-b950-2327da2deb77
Manley, S.
46bacfff-cf40-4894-86d8-4aa07e302e70
Matthews, D.
ba1a878d-6510-45c5-896c-d4ade423caca
Neil, A.
bd810992-d0a4-440e-b0d9-a71176e2a385
McElroy, H.
a5a1cbbc-4efa-47f7-8539-21a33695ee30
Kohner, E.
8183570a-a9b8-4b2e-8fc8-9265fd296329
Fox, C.
cdd47b77-8cdb-4f8c-ba33-b0f168e5bee9
Hadden, D.
4285fe4d-6716-4cef-ae5f-0c6b2aa838ef
Wright, D.
4c41f7fe-3396-4795-8fea-129537239c0a
Turner, R., Holman, R., Stratton, I., Cull, C., Frighi, V., Manley, S., Matthews, D., Neil, A., McElroy, H., Kohner, E., Fox, C., Hadden, D. and Wright, D.
(1998)
Tight blood pressure control and risk of macrovascular and microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes: UKPDS 38.
British medical journal, 317 (7160), .
Abstract
Objective: to determine whether tight control of blood pressure prevents macrovascular and microvascular complications in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Design: randomised controlled trial comparing tight control of blood pressure aiming at a blood pressure of < 150/85 mm Hg (with the use of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor captopril or a β blocker atenolol as main treatment) with less tight control aiming at a blood pressure of < 180/105 mm Hg.
Setting: 20 hospital based clinics in England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Subjects: 1148 hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes (mean age 56, mean blood pressure at entry 160/94 mm Hg); 758 patients were allocated to tight control of blood pressure and 390 patients to less tight control with a medial follow up of 8.4 years.
Main outcome measures: predefined clinical end points, fatal and non-fatal, related to diabetes, deaths related to diabetes, and all cause mortality. Surrogate measures of microvascular disease included urinary albumin excretion and retinal photography.
Results: mean blood pressure during follow up was significantly reduced in the group assigned tight blood pressure control (144/82 mm Hg) compared with the group assigned to less tight control (154/87 mm Hg) (P < 0.0001). Reductions in risk in the group assigned to tight control compared with that assigned to less tight control were 24% in diabetes related end points (95% confidence interval 8% to 38%) (P = 0.0046), 32% in deaths related to diabetes (6% to 51%) (P = 0.019), 44% in strokes (11% to 65%) (P = 0.013), and 37% in microvascular end points (11% to 56%) (P = 0.0092), predominantly owing to a reduced risk of retinal photocoagulation. There was a non-significant reduction in all cause mortality. After nine years of follow up the group assigned to tight blood pressure control also had a 34% reduction in risk in the proportion of patients with deterioration of retinopathy by two steps (99% confidence interval 11% to 50%) (P = 0.0004) and a 47% reduced risk (7% to 70%) (P = 0.004) of deterioration in visual acuity by three lines of the early treatment of diabetic retinopathy study (ETDRS) chart. After nine years of follow up 29% of patients in the group assigned to tight control required three or more treatments to lower blood pressure to achieve target blood pressures.
Conclusion: tight blood pressure control in patients with hypertension and type 2 diabetes achieves a clinically important reduction in the risk of deaths related to diabetes, complications related to diabetes, progression of diabetic retinopathy, and deterioration in visual acuity.
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Published date: 12 September 1998
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Local EPrints ID: 487213
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487213
ISSN: 0959-8146
PURE UUID: 0f03a886-fe16-4f7e-a4e5-bb305a7ec14c
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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 10:32
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 02:10
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Contributors
Author:
R. Turner
Author:
R. Holman
Author:
I. Stratton
Author:
C. Cull
Author:
V. Frighi
Author:
S. Manley
Author:
D. Matthews
Author:
A. Neil
Author:
H. McElroy
Author:
E. Kohner
Author:
C. Fox
Author:
D. Hadden
Author:
D. Wright
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