RCT: In mild-to-moderate ischemic stroke and elevated SBP, antihypertensive treatment beginning at 24 to 48 h vs on day 8 did not differ for dependency or death regardless of history of hypertension at 90 d.
Xie X, Zhong C, Liu X, et al. Early Versus Delayed Antihypertensive Treatment After Acute Ischemic Stroke by Hypertension History. Stroke. 2025 Mar;56(3):631-639. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.124.049242. Epub 2025 Jan 14.

BACKGROUND: We performed a prespecified subgroup analysis of the CATIS-2 trial (China Antihypertensive Trial in Acute Ischemic Stroke II) to compare the effect of early versus delayed antihypertensive treatment on death and disability in patients with and without medical history of hypertension.

METHODS: CATIS-2 is a multicenter randomized clinical trial conducted in 106 hospitals in China. The trial randomized 4810 patients with acute ischemic stroke within 24 to 48 hours of symptom onset and elevated systolic blood pressure between 140 and <220 mm Hg to receive antihypertensive treatment immediately after randomization or to discontinue antihypertensive medications for 7 days and then receive treatment on day 8. The primary outcome was a combination of death or functional dependency (modified Rankin Scale score =3) at 90 days.

RESULTS: At the 90-day follow-up, the primary outcome of death or functional dependency was not different between early- and delayed-treatment groups according to the history of hypertension; the odds ratios (95% CIs) associated with the early-treatment group were 1.11 (0.91-1.36) and 1.38 (0.92-2.08) for participants with and without a history of hypertension. However, the ordinal logistic regression showed that early antihypertensive treatment was associated with the odds of a higher modified Rankin Scale score in patients without hypertension (odds ratio, 1.35 [95% CI, 1.01-1.82]), but not in those with hypertension (odds ratio, 0.95 [95% CI, 0.82-1.10]; P=0.04 for interaction).

CONCLUSIONS: Early antihypertensive treatment did not reduce the odds of dependency or death at 90 days by hypertension history among patients with ischemic stroke but worsened functional outcomes for patients without hypertension in the ordinal analysis.

REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03479554.

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Hospital Doctor/Hospitalists

Blood pressure management after ischemic stroke continues to evolve. This study provides additional evidence about the time of antihypertensive treatment, and proposes potentially different treatment pathways for patients with and without hypertension. Although the findings may need to be confirmed in other settings before being incorporated into the standard of care, they are sufficiently compelling that some providers may elect to change management based on this evidence alone.

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Dr. Mark Mcconnell on 2025-02-01
This aligns well with multiple prior investigations showing that we often unnecessarily implement rapid treatment of blood pressure (and, similarly, glucose) perturbations in the acute care setting.
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