Abstract

A large number of studies has addressed the question of how effective is blood pressure (BP) control in the hypertensive population,1–3 with a consistent and unequivocal answer. That is, BP control is disappointingly low, because only a small fraction of patients diagnosed as having a BP elevation show on-treatment BPs <140 mm Hg systolic and 90 mm Hg diastolic, which are the target values for treatment recommended by international guidelines.4,5 This is the case regardless of whether patients are followed by general practitioners or specialists6,7 and have a low or high cardiovascular risk profile,8–10 the latter condition making the need of BP control even more compelling given the imminent risk of a cardiovascular event. Reality is obviously even worse when the lower BP targets that have been shown to be additionally protective in high-risk hypertensive patients, that is, <130/80 mm Hg, are considered.4,5 In a recent study performed in Italy, for example, we have shown that in diabetic (and, thus, high risk) hypertensive patients followed by general practitioners, an on-treatment BP <130/80 mm Hg was achieved in only 3% of the sample,7 the conclusion being that …

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