Original Article

Journal of Human Hypertension (2004) 18, 417–422. doi:10.1038/sj.jhh.1001718 Published online 22 April 2004

Impact of age on left ventricular hypertrophy regression during antihypertensive treatment with losartan or atenolol (the LIFE study)

The study was supported in part by Grant COZ-368 from Merck & Co., Inc., West Point, PA, USA, and Caroline Musaeus Aarsvold's grant from The Norwegian Medical Association.

E Gerdts1, M J Roman2, V Palmieri2, K Wachtell3, G Smith4, M S Nieminen5, B Dahlöf6 and R B Devereux2

  1. 1Institute of Medicine, University of Bergen, Norway
  2. 2Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY, USA
  3. 3Copenhagen County University Hospital, Glostrup, Denmark
  4. 4Department of Medicine, Ullevaal Hospital, Oslo, Norway
  5. 5Department of Cardiology, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland
  6. 6Department of Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital/Östra, Gothenburg, Sweden

Correspondence: Dr E Gerdts, Department of Heart Disease, Haukeland University Hospital, N-5021 Bergen, Norway. E-mail: evgerdts@online.no

Top

Abstract

To assess the influence of age on changes in left ventricular (LV) mass and geometry during antihypertensive treatment, we related age to clinical and echocardiographic findings before and after 4 years of antihypertensive treatment in a subset of 560 hypertensive patients without known concurrent disease in the Losartan Intervention For Endpoint reduction in hypertension (LIFE) study, which randomized patients to blinded losartan- or atenolol-based treatment. Patients greater than or equal to65 years (older group) included more women and patients with isolated systolic hypertension or albuminuria (all P<0.05). Compared to patients <65 years, older patients had higher pulse pressure, LV mass, and prevalence of concentric hypertrophy at baseline (78 vs 69 mmHg, 234 vs 224 g, and 28 vs 16%, respectively, all P<0.01), while the mean blood pressure did not differ. Over 4 years, reductions in LV mass and the mean blood pressure were similar in both groups, but older patients more often had residual hypertrophy (31 vs 15%, P<0.001) with a preponderance of eccentric geometry. In multivariate analysis of 4-year change in LV mass controlling for baseline mass, larger hypertrophy reduction was associated with losartan treatment, while age, gender, body mass index, and 4-year change in pulse pressure and albuminuria did not enter (Multiple R 2=0.40, P<0.001). Thus, in up-to-80-year-old hypertensive patients with left ventricular hypertrophy, age did not significantly attenuate hypertrophy reduction during antihypertensive treatment, although residual hypertrophy was more prevalent in older patients as a consequence of higher initial LV mass.

Keywords:

age, gender, left ventricular hypertrophy

Extra navigation

.
ADVERTISEMENT