3540992
Last Update Posted: 2018-05-30
Recruiting status is unknown
All Genders accepted | 20 Years + |
780 Estimated Participants | No Expanded Access |
Observational Study | Does not accept healthy volunteers |
Development of Diagnostic and Treatment Strategy for Resistant Hypertension
This study is a registry study to examine the clinical features, blood pressure control rate, and clinical prognosis of resistant hypertension in Koreans. This study will register patients with resistance hypertension in eight tertiary hospitals in Korea and follow up them for three years. The prognosis will be analysed according to etiologies, achieved blood pressure, and types of antihypertensive medication.
This study will enroll hypertensive patients who are in treatment or those who are referred from primary clinic based on inclusion or exclusion criteria. Basic clinical information, compliance with antihypertensive medications, concomitant use of other medications will be investigated and all patients will perform 24-hr ambulatory blood pressure measurement. Screening for renal artery stenosis and primary aldosteronism will be conducted. Office blood pressure will be taken every 3-6 months. Home blood pressure measurement and 24-hr ambulatory blood pressure measurement will be performed every year. The primary outcome is the newly developed MACE during the follow-up period. The secondary outcomes are newly developed target organ damage (LVH confirmed by echocardiography or EKG, carotid femoral PWV≥ 12m/s, microalbuminuria (Urine albumin-creatinine ratio ≥30 mg/g)) and decline of renal function (doubling of serum creatinine, dialysis). The follow-up period is 3 years.
Eligibility
Relevant conditions:
Resistant Hypertension
If you aren't sure if you meet the criteria above speak to your healthcare professional. Criteria may be updated but not reflected here, do not hesitate to contact the trial if you think are close to fitting criteria.
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
locations
Contact Information
Overall Contact
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov