The time in target rage (TTR) of systolic blood pressure (SBP) appears to be predictive in assessing the risk of cardiovascular death in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF), reports a recent study.
Through a post hoc analysis of the J-RHYTHM registry, the researchers evaluated 7,226 NVAF patients (mean age 70 years, 71 percent men) in whom BP had been assessed at least four times over a 2-year follow-up period. The target SBP range was 110–130 mm Hg. TTR was calculated by the Rosendaal linear interpolation method.
Average SBP-TTR was 50 percent. Bumping the target range up to 120–140 mm Hg only slightly altered the resulting TTR, which was 51 percent. Over the follow-up period, thromboembolism occurred in 110 patients, yielding an incidence rate of 1.5 percent. Corresponding rates of major haemorrhage, all-cause death, and cardiovascular death were 1.7 percent, 2.3 percent, and 0.8 percent.
When assessed as a continuous variable, every 1-percent increase in BP-TTR at 110–130 mm Hg suppressed the risk of all adverse events in the crude model. In the fully adjusted analysis, however, only cardiovascular death remained statistically associated with BP-TTR. BP-TTR at 120–140 mm Hg did not correlate with any adverse outcome.
“The present results suggest that systolic BP-TTR of 110–130 mm Hg … irrespective of target systolic BP of <110 or <120 mm Hg, would be useful for risk evaluation of cardiovascular death and thromboembolism, respectively, in patients with NVAF,” the researchers said.