Abstract

The risk of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events is the highest during the first several hours post-awakening in patients with hypertension. This is largely due to surges in morning blood pressure (BP). The current meta-analysis explored whether morning BP is affected by the timing of antihypertensive drug administration. Four medical databases were searched for clinical trials that examined the relationship between the timing of antihypertensive drug administration and morning BP levels. This meta-analysis compared morning BP surges in patients administered medication at bedtime versus patients administered medication during the day. The random effects model demonstrated that bedtime administration of antihypertensive drugs reduced morning systolic blood pressure (SBP) by 1.17 mmHg [with 95% confidence interval (CI): -2.47 to 0.37; P=0.08), and reduced morning diastolic blood pressure (DBP) by 0.95 mmHg (95% CI: -2.03 to 0.13; P=0.08), compared with patients who were administered medication during the daytime hours. However, the results did not demonstrate statistical significance. There was strong heterogeneity in both morning SBP (I2 =77.9% >50%, and Q test >0.1) and morning DBP results (I2 =77.9% >50%, and Q test >0.1). The funnel plots showed no publication bias in this study. Studies have shown that a 1 mmHg change was sufficient to reduce the risk of cardiovascular-related deaths by 2.1%. Therefore, changing the time of taking antihypertensive medications may significantly reduce cardiovascular-associated mortality. There were certain limitations to this meta-analysis. First, the heterogeneity of the meta-analysis was strong, with undefined reasons. Second, the sample size was relatively small, and future studies involving larger cohorts are warranted to further assess the effects of bedtime antihypertensive medication on minimizing morning BP surges.

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