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General Practice

Case-control study of stroke and the quality of hypertension control in north west England

BMJ 1997; 314 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.314.7076.272 (Published 25 January 1997) Cite this as: BMJ 1997;314:272
  1. Xianglin Du, research fellow in clinical epidemiologya,
  2. Kennedy Cruickshank, senior lecturer in clinical epidemiologya (clinep{at}man.ac.uk),
  3. Roseanne McNamee, senior lecturer in medical statisticsa,
  4. Mohamad Saraee, research fellowb,
  5. Joan Sourbutts, research nurse, clinical epidemiology unita,
  6. Alison Summers, consultant in public health medicinec,
  7. Nick Roberts, consultant physiciand,
  8. Elizabeth Walton, public health intelligence officerc,
  9. Stephen Holmes, principal in general practice and clinical tutore
  1. a School of Epidemiology and Health Sciences, University of Manchester Medical School, Manchester M13 9PT
  2. b Department of Computation, University of Manchester, Institute of Sciences and Technology, Manchester M60 1QD
  3. c Department of Public Health, East Lancashire Health Authority, Nelson, Lancashire BB9 5SZ
  4. d Department of Medicine for the Elderly, Queen's Park Hospital, Blackburn, Lancashire BB2 3HH
  5. e The Surgery, Earby, Lancashire BB8 6QT
  1. Correspondence to: Dr Du or Dr Cruickshank
  • Accepted 21 November 1996

Abstract

Objective: To examine the risk of stroke in relation to quality of hypertension control in routine general practice across an entire health district.

Design: Population based matched case-control study.

Setting: East Lancashire Health District with a participating population of 388 821 aged (80.

Subjects: Cases were patients under 80 with their first stroke identified from a population based stroke register between 1 July 1994 and 30 June 1995. For each case two controls matched with the case for age and sex were selected from the same practice register. Hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure !160 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure !95 mm Hg, or both, on at least two occasions within any three month period or any history of treatment with antihypertensive drugs.

Main outcome measures: Prevalence of hypertension and quality of control of hypertension (assessed by using the mean blood pressure recorded before stroke) and odds ratios of stroke (derived from conditional logistic regression).

Results: Records of 267 cases and 534 controls were examined; 61% and 42% of these subjects respectively were hypertensive. Compared with non-hypertensive subjects hypertensive patients receiving treatment whose average pre-event systolic blood pressure was controlled to <140 mm Hg had an adjusted odds ratio for stroke of 1.3 (95% confidence interval 0.6 to 2.7). Those fairly well controlled (140-149 mm Hg), moderately controlled (150-159 mm Hg), or poorly controlled (!160 mm Hg) or untreated had progressively raised odds ratios of 1.6, 2.2, 3.2, and 3.5 respectively. Results for diastolic pressure were similar; both were independent of initial pressures before treatment. Around 21% of strokes were thus attributable to inadequate control with treatment, or 46 first events yearly per 100 000 population aged 40-79.

Conclusions: Risk of stroke was clearly related to quality of control of blood pressure with treatment. In routine practice consistent control of blood pressure to below 150/90 mm Hg seems to be required for optimal stroke prevention.

Key messages

Key messages A case-control study based on the community stroke register and practice records showed a prevalence of hypertension of 61% for stroke patients and 42% in controls

Quality of control of blood pressure was clearly related to the risk of stroke, independent of baseline blood pressure

Detection and treatment rates of hypertension were high but control of blood pressure to below 150/90 mm Hg in treated hypertensive patients was only 33% in cases and 42% in controls

When achieving optimal control of hypertension (to <150/90 mm Hg) in the most at risk and treatable age range (40-79 years) 86 hypertensive patients currently not well controlled need to be treated over five years to prevent one stroke

Introduction

The continuous relation between the blood pressure level and risk of subsequent stroke provides much of the impetus for measuring blood pressure in primary care.12345 Similarly, the benefit in reducing stroke in trials of treatment is that predicted from observational studies.6 However, to what extent that potential benefit is realised in routine clinical practice is much less clear. In hospital attenders blood pressure achieved with treatment rather than the initial blood pressure determined the risk of stroke.7 8 Few studies in routine primary care have examined either the question of what constitutes “hypertension” in relation to stroke or the quality of control of previously treated blood pressure in stroke cases.910111213 Both factors are likely to account for much of the population stroke risk that should be preventable on current evidence. Using a population based stroke register maintained fully for one calendar year, we tried to determine the relation between the risk of stroke and the quality of control of hypertension in routine general practice across an entire health district. The study setting in the community also allowed those stroke patients not admitted nor ever seen at a hospital to be included, so providing a representative sample in which to examine the link between stroke and blood pressure.

Subjects and methods

The study was in east Lancashire, a health district including the towns of Blackburn and Burnley, with a total population of 534 287 in the 1995 general practice register. Stroke cases were identified from a district wide, population based stroke register between 1 July 1994 and 30 June 1995 with 103 of 118 general practices participating. Cases from a further 10 (8%) practices were inconsistently notified or verified, so the total practice inclusion rate was 79% (93 practices). These practices served a population of 405 272, of whom 388 821 were under 80 years of age (161 978 aged 40-79 years), the denominator for the study.

A case-control design was used, restricted to patients aged under 80 with their first ever strokes because strokes below this age can be regarded as preventable.14 15 The main hypothesis was that there was a difference in risk of stroke between hypertensive patients who were treated but not well controlled and those well controlled as well as subjects who were non-hypertensive. We used an arbitrary definition of hypertension (!160/95 mm Hg)16 likely to be in routine use before the study and assumed the prevalence of treated hypertensive patients who were not well controlled (!150/90 mm Hg) to be 14% of the population aged under 80. Applying these variables showed that 220 cases and 440 controls were required to detect an odds ratio of 2 compared with non-hypertensive subjects with 80% power when using a two sided α level of 5%. For each case two controls matched with the case for sex and age (within two years) and without a history of stroke were selected from the same practice register.

All blood pressure readings with the dates and drug treatment before the index date of stroke were recorded from the notes or the practice computer. The classification of who met definitions of “hypertension” was conducted on computer blind to case or control status. Each set of notes was also systematically searched for other known prespecified risk factors.

Hypertension was defined as above blood pressure levels on two or more occasions within any three month period or a history of antihypertensive treatment at any time. Baseline blood pressure was either the average of these two readings if they met the criteria for hypertension or the blood pressure immediately before treatment first started if the criteria had not been met at that time. The quality of hypertension control was assessed by using the mean blood pressure recorded in the last one, three, and five years before the index date. Treated hypertension was defined from the documented use (prescription) of drugs appropriate for hypertension.

Analysis–Matched case-control analysis was by conditional logistic regression,17 odds ratios being used to determine associations. Population attributable risk was calculated as the difference between overall risk in the population and the population risk that might be achieved if blood pressure were maintained at the “well controlled” level, divided by overall risk in the population. This was calculated in the population aged over 40 years because strokes are rare in people under 40.

Results

Stroke register–Of 1233 notifications from multiple sources, 932 were confirmed strokes. Of these, 642 were first ever strokes, 363 occurring in people under 80 (355 aged 40-79 years). Only the first 267 (74%) of the 363 formed the cases, as this number met power requirements and resources did not allow collection of two controls for the remaining 96 cases. However, these 96 cases were similar to the cases included: case fatality at 28 days was 25.1% for the 267 cases compared with 25.3% for the 363; age and sex distribution was also similar.

Prevalence–Comparing the characteristics of cases and controls showed a significantly higher prevalence of smoking, transient ischaemic attack, atrial fibrillation, and diabetes in cases (table 1). Occasional drinking and regular light drinking had protective effects. There was no significant impact of other recorded factors. Sixty one per cent (157/258) of stroke cases were hypertensive compared with 42% (212/499) of controls. The adjusted odds ratio for stroke due to hypertension was 2.5 (95% confidence interval 1.7 to 3.9). The prevalence of hypertension increased with age and was higher in women.

Table 1

Characteristics of cases and controls.Except where stated otherwise figures are numbers (percentages) of subjects

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Effects of blood pressure control–Compared with non-hypertensive subjects, hypertensive patients whose average systolic blood pressure in the last five years before the index date was well controlled to below 140 mm Hg or fairly well controlled to 140-149 mm Hg had insignificantly raised odds ratios (table 2). Hypertensive patients whose systolic blood pressure was moderately controlled (150-159 mm Hg) or poorly controlled (!160 mm Hg) or untreated had progressively raised risks. Odds ratios for well controlled diastolic pressure (<85 mm Hg), fairly well controlled diastolic pressure (85-89 mm Hg), moderately controlled diastolic pressure (90-94 mm Hg), and poorly controlled (!95 mm Hg) and untreated diastolic pressure were generally similar to those for systolic pressure in size and trend (fig 1). Risk was also similar for blood pressure levels achieved in the last one and three years before the index date (data not shown) but was strongest and most consistent in the last five years. Patients with no blood pressure readings recorded in the last five years had over five times the risk for stroke with wide confidence intervals. Systolic and diastolic blood pressures were highly correlated. After adjusting each for the effect of the other adjusted odds ratios for systolic pressures of 150-159 mm Hg and !160 mm Hg were significantly raised at 1.7 and 2.0 compared with non-hypertensive subjects and for diastolic pressures !95 mm Hg were 5.4.

Table 2

Relation between risk of stroke and blood pressure control in last five years before stroke

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Fig 1
Fig 1

Odds ratios for stroke in relation to average diastolic blood pressures achieved with treatment in last five years before stroke (bars are 95% confidence intervals)

Baseline blood pressure–The risk of stroke with achieved blood pressure was also examined in relation to baseline pressure before treatment (table 3). This showed a trend of increasing risk with poor control (that is, a trend across rows) in almost all groups defined by their baseline pressure. However, there was no consistent trend from low to high baseline pressures (that is, down columns), suggesting that after treatment baseline pressures no longer influenced the risk of stroke. To test this proposition more formally models which included achieved and baseline blood pressures were fitted. Adding the achieved pressure variable to a model including baseline significantly improved the fit (P=0.04 for systolic; P<0.001 for diastolic) whereas adding the baseline pressure variable to a model including achieved pressure did not (P=0.192; P=0.388). We also considered whether the effect of achieved blood pressure varied with the baseline pressure by fitting an interaction variable to the model; this was not significant (P=0.282; P=0.146).

Table 3

Effect of achieved blood pressure in treated hypertensive patients in last five years before stroke and baseline blood pressure. Results expressed as odds ratios (95%confidence intervals) adjusted as in table 1 (numbers of cases,controls). Non-hypertensive subjects served as reference

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Population attributable risk–When moderately controlled, poorly controlled, or untreated hypertension was reduced to well controlled levels (<150/90 mm Hg) population attributable risk was 21% in the population aged 40-79 years after adjusting for the total age and sex specific population. Thus every year 75 (21% of 355) first strokes in a population of 161 978 aged 40-79 years could have been prevented by good control, a rate of some 46 events per 100 000 population aged 40-79 years. The number of poorly controlled and untreated hypertensive patients requiring good control to below 150/90 mm Hg (that is, the “numbers needed to treat”) to prevent one stroke was 86 for five years in the population aged 40-79 years.

Discussion

This population based case-control study examined the relation between the risk of stroke and the quality of hypertension control in people aged under 80. To our knowledge this is the first study to do so after ascertaining all stroke events in routine care in a whole community rather than selected (hospital or volunteer) cases.

The study had potential limitations. Firstly, clinical diagnosis of stroke made by doctors was usually not confirmed by computed tomography. The clinical diagnosis of a stroke having occurred or not is reliable.18 19 As the diagnosis of stroke types without computed tomography is unreliable,19 all types of stroke were combined. Secondly, though hypertension data were missing in only 5% of notes, the proportion missing for smoking and alcohol consumption was large. However, we analysed the effect of these missing values, which illustrated their potential risks. Our results also showed an impact on stroke from other major risk factors–twofold for known diabetes and nearly threefold for smoking, similar to results of cohort studies.20 21

Though hypertension detection was much better than the rule of halves, achieving adequate control for patients so detected was not. The rule was operating in the United Kingdom in the 1980s11 22 and continues in the most recent analyses in terms of control.23 24 This is particularly important for communities at high cardiovascular risk with most to gain–for instance, older adults and particular ethnic groups. Trial results have shown unequivocal evidence in favour of hypertension treatment reducing all cardiovascular events, dating back to 1985 for older adults,252627282930 illustrating the difficulty of convincing doctors and possibly patients that not just treatment but optimal control is what matters.

Over half of the hypertensive stroke cases (51%; 80/157) had either untreated or poorly controlled blood pressure in the last five years before the index date compared with 42% (88/212) of non-stroke hypertensive patients. The gap between routine practice and evidence from other studies may partly be due to the doctors' beliefs–for example, that these were research populations and therefore less relevant to their practice–or due to the slow acceptance of new knowledge. As our study was based on practitioners' own medical records in routine primary care the results would be highly relevant not only to them but also to health purchasers, as general practitioners are the gatekeepers of medical care in the NHS.

The most appropriate way of expressing these results for routine practice has been discussed.31 32 For primary care teams and purchasers perhaps the most useful is in relation to the age group at high risk–say, 40-79 years. For those hypertensive patients in our study who were receiving treatment, achieving good control to below 150/90 mm Hg reduced the risk of stroke by 53% with a continuing favourable trend below this level. Some 46 first strokes per 100 000 population aged 40-79 years could be avoided yearly. Hence the number needed to treat was 86 such hypertensive patients required to have changed from poorly controlled to well controlled blood pressure levels (maintained at that average level over five years) to have prevented one stroke, and within this age range the older the patient the greater the absolute benefit.

Finally, other studies may have overestimated the role of diastolic pressure by not adjusting for the simultaneous systolic value1 2 5 6 and smoking.5 In a recent large prospective study33 and an earlier study34 the impact of diastolic pressure on risk of stroke was much reduced when systolic pressure was taken into account. However, in our study the effect of one pressure when adjusted for the other was still impressive with the size of risk reduced only slightly. Thus in routine practice our data suggest that, independent of baseline level, blood pressure achieved with treatment in the few years before a stroke was the important predicting factor. This has important implications for hypertension management policy, requiring patients with hypertension to have their blood pressure treated and maintained below the specified target levels rather than just being given treatment.

Conclusion

The risk of stroke was clearly related to the quality of blood pressure control with treatment. In routine practice, together with detecting untreated subjects, consistent control to target levels below 150/90 mm Hg rather than just starting treatment seems to be required for optimal stroke prevention.

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr A Hirst and Ms A Wilson, of East Lancashire Medical Audit Advisory Group; Dr B Theodoulidis; participating doctors, their teams, and community health service staff for their help; and Dr Phil Hannaford and Professors Stuart Donnan and Nicola Cherry for critically reviewing the manuscript.

Funding: The study was partially funded by East Lancashire Health Authority.

Conflict of interest: None.

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