Abstract
Grading of essential hypertension according to blood pressure (BP) level may not adequately reflect clinical heterogeneity of hypertensive patients. This study was carried out to explore clinical phenotypes in essential hypertensive patients using cluster analysis. This study recruited 513 hypertensive patients and evaluated BP variations with ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. Four distinct hypertension groups were identified using cluster analysis: (1) younger male smokers with relatively high BP had the most severe carotid plaque thickness but no coronary artery disease (CAD); (2) older women with relatively low diastolic BP had more diabetes; (3) non-smokers with a low systolic BP level had neither diabetes nor CAD; (4) hypertensive patients with BP reverse dipping were most likely to have CAD but had least severe carotid plaque thickness. In binary logistic analysis, reverse dipping was significantly associated with prevalence of CAD. Cluster analysis was shown to be a feasible approach for investigating the heterogeneity of essential hypertension in clinical studies. BP reverse dipping might be valuable for prediction of CAD in hypertensive patients when compared with carotid plaque thickness. However, large-scale prospective trials with more information of plaque morphology are necessary to further compare the predicative power between BP dipping pattern and carotid plaque.
Highlights
In this study, we applied cluster analysis to explore possible subgroups within a well-characterized population of hypertensive patients who had circadian BP monitoring and carotid ultrasound examinations
BP pattern was the only common risk factor significantly correlated with coronary artery disease (CAD) when comparing cluster 4 with cluster 3 (Fig. 3)
Cluster analysis has been successfully applied in medical research[14]
Summary
We applied cluster analysis to explore possible subgroups within a well-characterized population of hypertensive patients who had circadian BP monitoring and carotid ultrasound examinations. This study would help to identify potential risk factors for CAD in hypertensive patients.
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have