Why Do Official Guidelines for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease Stop Short at the Age of 80?
Heinz Redwood
June 16, 2000
(Reviewed: December 11, 2002)
Diseases of the blood circulation include ischaemic heart disease (leading to heart attacks) and
cerebrovascular disease (leading to stroke). The most prominent, measurable risk factor
pointing towards these outcomes is hypertension (high blood pressure).
Worldwide, ischaemic and cerebrovascular diseases were the two leading causes of death in
1990 and have been are forecast still to remain be the 'Top-2' in 2020. In their comprehensive
study of "The Global Burden of Disease"1, Murray & Lopez (1996) estimated that the two
diseases will be responsible for about 37% of all deaths [34% for men and 40% for women] in
the Developed Regions and 25% in the Developing Countries in 2020. In that year, about 5.7
million persons are forecast to die from the two diseases in the Developed Regions and 14.5
million in the Developing Countries.
Cardiovascular 'disability' and the elderly
The two diseases are also expected
to be the two leading causes of 'life with disability' in 2020. Since about
two-thirds of the disability burden of cardiovascular disease is borne by
persons over the age of 60 (59% of men's disability,75% of women's), this
will badly affect the quality of life of the elderly unless preventive measures
are taken effectively, extensively and in good time.
Mortality statistics for cardiovascular diseases, not surprisingly, put
an even more dramatic emphasis on the elderly. For example, In France
in 1996, only 25.5% of deaths from cardiovascular disease occurred in
persons under the age of 75. Yet the focus of French health policy is
to achieve major reductions in cardiovascular mortality of the under-75s:
a target for 20% fewer deaths that are regarded as 'premature' [i.e. among
the under-75s] was set in 1994 for the year 2000 (Haut Comité de
la Santé; Publique2, 1998). While the avoidance of premature
deaths is an understandable objective, there is no objective reason for
applying a lower preventive priority to the aged majority of sufferers
with cardiovascular diseases. Modern methods of prevention can be applied
and made effective without age discrimination. Indeed, the 'very old'
should have the same right of access to preventive medicine as anyone
else.
Moreover, there is increasing recognition of the fact that prevention
and treatment of the elderly will need to differ from measures that are
appropriate for younger age groups, but this is only beginning to be reflected
in the translation of risk factors into practical preventive Guidelines.
Risk Factors
Hypertension is a baffling condition
in several respects: for primary or 'essential' hypertension, "in about
95% of cases, no cause can be established", and "mild to moderate
essential hypertension is usually associated with normal health and well-being
for many years" ("Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment"3;
,1999).
This being so, risk factors leading to hypertension and eventually cardiovascular
diseases have been studied in depth and represent a vitally important
element in defining preventive guidelines. Apart from the 'unmanageable'
aspects of age, gender, genetics, and poverty, the following are widely
accepted as prime manageable risk factors for cardiovascular diseases:
* smoking
* obesity
* high levels of alcohol consumption
* unsuitable nutrition
* lack of physical exercise
* elevated total and low density lipoprotein [LDL] cholesterol
[For the background to Risk Factors, see two papers by R. W. Griffith]
4
'Manageable' and 'unmanageable' risks
Evidently, the 'manageable'
risk factors are associated with lifestyles, and several of them can be
inter-linked: for example, unsuitable nutrition with obesity and/or high
cholesterol levels, and obesity with lack of physical exercise. Guidelines
generally stress the need for lifestyle changes as a first step in controlling
the 'manageable' risk factors before resorting to medical interventions
and treatment with prescription drugs.
The 'unmanageable' risk factors, too, will often benefit from
changes in lifestyle - for example, in old age, but may require early
medical treatment in order to prevent the more serious consequences of
established hypertension or the worsening of cardiovascular disease. This
can be vitally important for elderly patients who have other illnesses
that are themselves risk factors for cardiovascular problems, such as
diabetes and kidney failure.
Guidelines for the elderly
Although cardiovascular morbidity
and mortality are prominently, even predominantly, problems associated with
old age, national and international guidelines for the management of hypertension
have only recently begun to include guidance that is specifically directed
at the elderly or 'very old' segment of the hypertensive population. Whether
past neglect was a symptom of 'ageism' or merely an assumption that hypertension
and cardiovascular disease were conditions of old age anyway and therefore
did not need an age focus, is unclear. What matters is that the special
needs and problems of the elderly are now being included in guidelines.
The 1999 Guidelines of WHO [World Health Organisation] - International
Society of Hypertension have a section devoted to the "very elderly"
and draw attention to the fact that there is as yet very little evidence
about the health impact of antihypertensive treatment on patients above
the age of 80. Up to that age, benefits and safety do not differ significantly
between younger and older patients, "although the absolute effects
are typically greater in older individuals because of their higher risk
of cardiovascular events" (Guidelines Subcommittee5, 1999). The Subcommittee
considers the value of antihypertensive treatment of the over-80s as 'uncertain'
pending the results of new clinical trials of (or including) the very
old.
The absence of such evidence in today's sophisticated health care systems
is both incomprehensible and inexcusable. Considering the fact that the
over-85s are now the fastest growing segment of the population in the
Industrialised World, the sooner evidence is produced, the better.
In the USA, the Sixth Report of the Joint National Committee
on...High Blood Pressure (1997)
6 adopts a much more
practical approach to 'Hypertension in older persons' (i.e. over the age
of 60). It draws attention to the fact that systolic blood pressure will
predict cardiovascular disease events in the elderly more reliably than
the measurement of diastolic pressure, and that the latest evidence suggests
that pulse pressure may be an even better marker.
The Report also advises doctors to take special care with measuring the
blood pressure of older patients so as to avoid misdiagnosis of pseudohypertension
which arises from stiffening of blood vessels, or so-called 'white-coat'
hypertension. The latter is a nervous reaction to having your blood pressure
tested in the white-coat atmosphere of the doctor's office; it affects
the elderly more than younger patients and gives misleadingly high readings
of blood pressure.
The Report cites positive evidence of the absolute benefits of antihypertensive
treatment of the over-60s. It provides practical guidance by stressing
that starting doses of drug treatment should be at about half the dose
that would normally be used in younger patients and by pointing out that,
for the elderly, some drugs are considerably safer or more effective than
others.
The 1999 British Hypertension Society guidelines, too, deal with
"elderly hypertensive patients" specifically. In a synopsis
of their contents, there is welcome acknowledgment of the fact that, in
an ageing society, "it is...important to discuss the elderly
as a patient group". The guidelines also advocate antihypertensive
treatment of the very old without age discrimination, pointing to its
benefits in reducing the risk of heart failure and its possible advantages
in helping to preserve cognitive function and reducing the risk of dementia.
"Once started, treatment should be continued after the age of 80.
When the initial diagnosis of hypertension is made in a patient older
than 80 years, treatment decisions should probably be based on biological
rather than chronological age, although there is little evidence to guide
treatment policy in this age group" (Williams7, 2000).
Once again, firm evidence would help to affirm the case in favour of
judgments based on biological age.
In Europe, the Recommendations of the Second Joint Task Force...on
Coronary Prevention have also stated clearly that
"Patients who develop symptoms of coronary heart disease for the
first time, at any age, should be able to address all aspects of cardiac
prevention and rehabilitation according to their individual needs"
(Task Fore Report8, 1998).
Worth noting: "at any age" and "according to...individual
needs" which will differ not only individually but also between the
old or 'very old' and younger patients. The report also refers to the
absence of firm evidence about the benefits of some risk factor interventions
for the 'very elderly' and concludes that "judgment is again required
on what action, if any, to take."
Guidelines and their application in clinical practice in Switzerland
A Swiss simulation study (based
on 1997 risk factor data) has evaluated the degree to which the latest
recommendations by WHO/International Society of Hypertension are being
applied in practice. It found that, in terms of drug treatment of hypertension
and dyslipidaemia (high cholesterol), actual treatment was well below
guideline levels, and the discrepancy between 'recommended' and 'actual'
was most striking for the highest recorded age group (65-74):
Recommended and
actual drug treatmant
(Swiss model. % of persons treated, 1997)
|
Age
|
55-64
|
65-74
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hypertension - men
|
|
|
|
Guidelines
|
40
|
63
|
|
Actual
|
17
|
29
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hypertension - women
|
|
|
|
Guidelines
|
30
|
49
|
|
Actual
|
21
|
32
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dyslipidaemia - men
|
|
|
|
Guidelines
|
43
|
30
|
|
Actual
|
6
|
7
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dyslipidaemia - women
|
|
|
|
Guidelines
|
30
|
50
|
|
Actual
|
4
|
5
|
(Source: Wietlisbach, Rickenbach and Paccaud9, March 2000)
The table shows that, even for hypertension where drug treatment
has been available since the 1950s, only about two-thirds of men and women
judged eligible by the international guidelines actually received medication.
For high cholesterol, only a tiny minority was treated with drugs in 1997:
less than a quarter of men aged 65-74 and just one-tenth of women in that
age group.
The report, whilst acknowledging the large under-utilisation
gap, also expresses the view that the reality of medical practice is usually
more complex than allowed for in guidelines. The 'ideal' practice conditions
on which guidelines are based are not replicated in real life: screening
is not universal, doctors do not observe recommendations to the letter,
and compliance by patients is less than perfect.
Moreover, the authors consider that the international guidelines,
based mainly on conditions in the USA, are not necessarily relevant to
conditions elsewhere and may therefore be encouraging
excessive use of intensive treatments, especially in countries - including
Switzerland - where 'The French Paradox' applies: high cholesterol and
low cardiovascular mortality!
With regard to the elderly, the authors of the Swiss Report
also criticise the implied intensity of giving medication for both hypertension
and high cholesterol to those patients whose hypertension and cholesterol
levels are moderate rather than elevated.
In spite of these imperfections and the need to adapt international
guidelines to national requirements, the report considers that clinical
practice in Switzerland falls far short of what is required in the way
of preventive medication, and recommends a blend between "adopting
and adapting" the existing guidelines. This would seem to be a wise
approach to the treatment of elderly patients.
Footnotes
1. The Global Burden of Disease ed. Murray, A. D. Lopez, Harvard School of Public Health, WHO, World Bank, 1996
2. Haut Comité de la Santé Publique, "La santé en France 1994-1998", La Documentation Française
3. Current Medical Diagnosis and Treatment ed. Lawrence, M. Tierney, et al., Appleton and Lange, Stamford, Connecticut, 1999
4. "Risk Factors (1) and (2)", R.W. Griffith, http://www.healthandage.org/PHome/gm=20!gc=36!l=2!gid2=608 and http://www.healthandage.org/PHome/gm=20!gc=36!l=2!gid2=612
5. Guidelines Sub-Committee, "1999 WHO-International Society of Hypertension Guidelines
for the Management of Hypertension", J of Hypertension, 1999, 17, p151:153
6. The Sixth
Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation,
and Treatment of High Blood Pressure, Arch. Intern. Med., 1997, 157, p2413
7. The 1999 British Hypertension Society guidelines: A synopsis B. Williams, Modern Hypertension Management, 2000, pp. S3--S12
8. Prevention of coronary heart disease in clinical practice - Recommendations
of the Second Joint Task Force of European and other Societies on coronary
prevention Task Force Report, European Heart J., 1998, pp. 1424--1503
9. Traitement de l'hypertension, de la dyslipidémie et de l'obésité en Suisse: faut-il adopter ou adapter de nouvelles recommendations internationales? V. Wietlisbach, M. Rickenbach, F. Paccaud, Médecine et Hygiène, 2000, pp. 586--593
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