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ISOLATED SYSTOLIC HYPERTENSION IN THE ELDERLY - IMPLICATIONS OF SHEP FOR CLINICAL-PRACTICE AND FOR THE ONGOING TRIALS

Journal of human hypertension(1991)

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摘要
The Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program (SHEP) was a double-blind placebo-controlled outcome trial on the treatment of isolated systolic hypertension (systolic pressure: 160-219 mmHg and diastolic pressure < 90 mmHg). From 447, 921 screenees (age greater-than-or-equal-to 60 years) 4,736 patients were randomised. A significant reduction of non-fatal stroke (37%), non-fatal myocardial infarction (33%) and left ventricular failure (54%) was observed in the active treatment group. By contrast, the reduction in transient ischaemic attacks (25%), and in total (13%), cardiovascular (20%), cerebrovascular (29%) and coronary (20%) mortality did not reach a level of statistical significance. SHEP is a landmark trial on the treatment of isolated systolic hypertension (ISH) in the elderly. However, the question to what extent the SHEP results can be extrapolated to clinical practice remains open for debate. Indeed, it is possible that due to selection, the SHEP patients were not entirely representative of the elderly with ISH in the population at large. By contrast with previous intervention studies in elderly patients with combined systolic and diastolic hypertension, the SHEP trail did not demonstrate a significant beneficial effect of antihypertensive treatment on any of the cardiovascular mortality endpoints. Confirmation or rejection of the SHEP results in other trails, including the Syst-Eur study, conducted by the European Working Party on High Blood Pressure in the Elderly and the Chinese trial in elderly ISH patients, is now awaited.
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关键词
systolic hypertension,isolated systolic hypertension,elderly program
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