Cargando…

Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium

BACKGROUND: Hypertension is a very common comorbidity and major risk factor for cardiovascular complications, especially in people with Type 2 Diabetes (T2D). Nevertheless, studies in the past have shown that blood pressure is often insufficiently controlled in medical practice. For the DIAB-CARE st...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rückert, Ina-Maria, Baumert, Jens, Schunk, Michaela, Holle, Rolf, Schipf, Sabine, Völzke, Henry, Kluttig, Alexander, Greiser, Karin-Halina, Tamayo, Teresa, Rathmann, Wolfgang, Meisinger, Christa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4519307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26221962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133493
_version_ 1782383494143410176
author Rückert, Ina-Maria
Baumert, Jens
Schunk, Michaela
Holle, Rolf
Schipf, Sabine
Völzke, Henry
Kluttig, Alexander
Greiser, Karin-Halina
Tamayo, Teresa
Rathmann, Wolfgang
Meisinger, Christa
author_facet Rückert, Ina-Maria
Baumert, Jens
Schunk, Michaela
Holle, Rolf
Schipf, Sabine
Völzke, Henry
Kluttig, Alexander
Greiser, Karin-Halina
Tamayo, Teresa
Rathmann, Wolfgang
Meisinger, Christa
author_sort Rückert, Ina-Maria
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hypertension is a very common comorbidity and major risk factor for cardiovascular complications, especially in people with Type 2 Diabetes (T2D). Nevertheless, studies in the past have shown that blood pressure is often insufficiently controlled in medical practice. For the DIAB-CARE study, we used longitudinal data based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium to assess whether health care regarding hypertension has improved during the last decade in our participants. METHODS: Data of the three regional population-based studies CARLA (baseline 2002-2006 and follow-up 2007-2010), KORA (baseline 1999-2001 and follow-up 2006-2008) and SHIP (baseline 1997-2001 and follow-up 2002-2006) were pooled. Stratified by T2D status we analysed changes in frequencies, degrees of awareness, treatment and control. Linear mixed models were conducted to assess the influence of sex, age, study, and T2D status on changes of systolic blood pressure between the baseline and follow-up examinations (mean observation time 5.7 years). We included 4,683 participants aged 45 to 74 years with complete data and accounted for 1,256 participants who were lost to follow-up by inverse probability weighting. RESULTS: Mean systolic blood pressure decreased in all groups from baseline to follow-up (e.g. – 8.5 mmHg in those with incident T2D). Pulse pressure (PP) was markedly higher in persons with T2D than in persons without T2D (64.14 mmHg in prevalent T2D compared to 52.87 mmHg in non-T2D at baseline) and did not change much between the two examinations. Awareness, treatment and control increased considerably in all subgroups however, the percentage of those with insufficiently controlled hypertension remained high (at about 50% of those with hypertension) especially in prevalent T2D. Particularly elderly people with T2D often had both, high blood pressure ≥140/90 mmHg and a PP of ≥60 mmHg. Blood pressure in men had improved more than in women at follow-up, however, men still had higher mean SBP than women at follow-up. CONCLUSION: Blood pressure management has developed positively during past years in Germany. While hypertension prevalence, awareness and treatment were substantially higher in participants with T2D than in those without T2D at follow-up, hypertension control was achieved only in about half the number of people in each T2D group leaving much room for further improvement.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4519307
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-45193072015-07-31 Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium Rückert, Ina-Maria Baumert, Jens Schunk, Michaela Holle, Rolf Schipf, Sabine Völzke, Henry Kluttig, Alexander Greiser, Karin-Halina Tamayo, Teresa Rathmann, Wolfgang Meisinger, Christa PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Hypertension is a very common comorbidity and major risk factor for cardiovascular complications, especially in people with Type 2 Diabetes (T2D). Nevertheless, studies in the past have shown that blood pressure is often insufficiently controlled in medical practice. For the DIAB-CARE study, we used longitudinal data based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium to assess whether health care regarding hypertension has improved during the last decade in our participants. METHODS: Data of the three regional population-based studies CARLA (baseline 2002-2006 and follow-up 2007-2010), KORA (baseline 1999-2001 and follow-up 2006-2008) and SHIP (baseline 1997-2001 and follow-up 2002-2006) were pooled. Stratified by T2D status we analysed changes in frequencies, degrees of awareness, treatment and control. Linear mixed models were conducted to assess the influence of sex, age, study, and T2D status on changes of systolic blood pressure between the baseline and follow-up examinations (mean observation time 5.7 years). We included 4,683 participants aged 45 to 74 years with complete data and accounted for 1,256 participants who were lost to follow-up by inverse probability weighting. RESULTS: Mean systolic blood pressure decreased in all groups from baseline to follow-up (e.g. – 8.5 mmHg in those with incident T2D). Pulse pressure (PP) was markedly higher in persons with T2D than in persons without T2D (64.14 mmHg in prevalent T2D compared to 52.87 mmHg in non-T2D at baseline) and did not change much between the two examinations. Awareness, treatment and control increased considerably in all subgroups however, the percentage of those with insufficiently controlled hypertension remained high (at about 50% of those with hypertension) especially in prevalent T2D. Particularly elderly people with T2D often had both, high blood pressure ≥140/90 mmHg and a PP of ≥60 mmHg. Blood pressure in men had improved more than in women at follow-up, however, men still had higher mean SBP than women at follow-up. CONCLUSION: Blood pressure management has developed positively during past years in Germany. While hypertension prevalence, awareness and treatment were substantially higher in participants with T2D than in those without T2D at follow-up, hypertension control was achieved only in about half the number of people in each T2D group leaving much room for further improvement. Public Library of Science 2015-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4519307/ /pubmed/26221962 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133493 Text en © 2015 Rückert et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rückert, Ina-Maria
Baumert, Jens
Schunk, Michaela
Holle, Rolf
Schipf, Sabine
Völzke, Henry
Kluttig, Alexander
Greiser, Karin-Halina
Tamayo, Teresa
Rathmann, Wolfgang
Meisinger, Christa
Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium
title Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium
title_full Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium
title_fullStr Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium
title_full_unstemmed Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium
title_short Blood Pressure Control Has Improved in People with and without Type 2 Diabetes but Remains Suboptimal: A Longitudinal Study Based on the German DIAB-CORE Consortium
title_sort blood pressure control has improved in people with and without type 2 diabetes but remains suboptimal: a longitudinal study based on the german diab-core consortium
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4519307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26221962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0133493
work_keys_str_mv AT ruckertinamaria bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT baumertjens bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT schunkmichaela bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT hollerolf bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT schipfsabine bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT volzkehenry bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT kluttigalexander bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT greiserkarinhalina bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT tamayoteresa bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT rathmannwolfgang bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium
AT meisingerchrista bloodpressurecontrolhasimprovedinpeoplewithandwithouttype2diabetesbutremainssuboptimalalongitudinalstudybasedonthegermandiabcoreconsortium