Hypertension Clinical Trial
To determine if nonpharmacological interventions, including diet and lifestyle change, could prevent increases in arterial blood pressure leading to systemic hypertension.
BACKGROUND:
High blood pressure affects between 15 and 30 percent of the adult population in the United
States, and is a major contributor to some of the leading causes of death including coronary
artery and cerebrovascular diseases. A substantial body of evidence from both population and
laboratory studies indicates that a number of dietary and lifestyle factors are associated
with the chronic and progressive increase in blood pressure with age, commonly observed in
populations of industrialized countries. There are also an increasing number of reports of
important reductions in blood pressure in persons with hypertension following treatment with
a number of different non-pharmacological interventions. These observations have led to
interest in the possibility of the primary prevention of hypertension through
non-pharmacological intervention on factors related to the development of high blood
pressure.
In 1979, the main results of the NHLBI-supported Hypertension Detection and Follow-up
Program (HDFP), then the largest of the randomized clinical trials of antihypertensive drug
treatment, were reported. This trial compared the effects of intensive systematic
Stepped-Care drug treatment with Referred-Care in the community. These results confirmed
findings of earlier and subsequently reported placebo-controlled trials that effective
blood-pressure lowering in hypertensive individuals reduces the occurrence of stroke,
congestive heart failure, and other complications of hypertension, and for the first time
demonstrated a significant reduction of total mortality. The implications of the findings
regarding recommendations for long-term drug treatment for tens of millions of Americans led
several groups of investigators to consider alternative approaches to the control of
hypertension. To the concerns of these clinicians about drug-related symptoms and economic
costs were added additional questions regarding the safety of common antihypertensive agents
in some hypertensive subgroups, based on the results of the Multiple Risk Factor
Intervention Trial and on other evidence.
A number of small to moderate-sized randomized clinical trials of non-pharmacologic
intervention in hypertension have been initiated during the past 5 years with NHLBI support.
The Hypertension Prevention Trial (HPT) was the largest program studying the effectiveness
of intervening in a non-hypertensive population. The HPT was a feasibility study to
establish the ability to enroll in sufficient numbers men and women with diastolic blood
pressure of 78-89 mm Hg; to determine if dietary intervention alone could achieve sustained
weight reduction, and/or a decrease in sodium intake, or an increase in potassium intake
along with sodium reduction in these subjects; and to study the effects of the interventions
on blood pressure. If feasibility were demonstrated, the plan was to conduct a full-scale
trial with incidence of frank hypertension as the outcome measure.
The HPT achieved its feasibility goals regarding recruitment of participants and weight
reduction, but not for dietary sodium reduction and potassium increase. Some of the other
dietary trials among non-hypertensive subjects have also achieved relatively small sodium
changes (20-25 percent); a few have produced much larger changes, but only with short-term
follow-up. Other experience has also shown that it is difficult to increase potassium intake
by dietary means alone.
The importance of further work in this area has meanwhile been reinforced by conclusions of
several expert groups convened by NHLBI. These have included the participants in the 1984
NIH Workshop on Nutrition and Hypertension and the 1984 Joint National Committee on
Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure, whose report addressed in some
detail non-pharmacologic intervention and primary prevention.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Phase I was a pilot study to test the feasibility of providing and obtaining compliance with
selected nutritional-behavioral, non-pharmacologic interventions and to measure the
short-term effectiveness of the interventions on reducing or preventing an increase in
diastolic blood pressure. Ten clinical centers, and a coordinating center, which included
two central laboratories and a nutrient data center, participated. Each clinic tested a
subset of the interventions. The lifestyle arm of the trial, which included weight loss,
sodium restriction, and stress management, had an open design with untreated controls. The
two-stage supplement arm of the trial, which tested magnesium and calcium in Stage I, and
fish oil and potassium in Stage II, was double-blinded and placebo-controlled. Three clinics
tested only lifestyle interventions, two tested only supplements, and five participated in
both arms of the trial. Recruitment began in August 1987 and randomization was completed by
October 1988. Endpoint data collection was completed in January 1990. The average follow-up
was approximately 18 months.
Phase II had a 2x2 factorial design to test the effectiveness of weight loss and sodium
restriction alone and in combination in reducing blood pressure and decreasing the incidence
of definite hypertension. Lifestyle interventions were administered through counseling
sessions at each center. Blood pressure, weight, body mass index, skin fold thickness, and
urine electrolytes were measured at baseline and at six month intervals for a minimum of 36
months. Recruitment began at the end of 1990 and was completed in March 1992. Intervention
and follow-up were completed in March 1995. Data analysis continued through June 1998 under
U01-HL-37852, the coordinating center.
The main results were presented at the 1995 American Heart Association Scientific Sessions.
The Phase II main results paper was published in March 1997.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in
the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.
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Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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