Ambulatory blood pressure and drug treatment for orthostatic hypotension as predictors of mortality in patients with Multiple System Atrophy
SAMIER FOUBERT, Alexandra
Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives [Bordeaux] [IMN]
Bordeaux population health [BPH]
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Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives [Bordeaux] [IMN]
Bordeaux population health [BPH]
SAMIER FOUBERT, Alexandra
Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives [Bordeaux] [IMN]
Bordeaux population health [BPH]
< Leer menos
Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives [Bordeaux] [IMN]
Bordeaux population health [BPH]
Idioma
EN
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
European Journal of Neurology. 2021-12-31
Resumen en inglés
OBJECTIVES: Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a rare fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by parkinsonism, cerebellar ataxia and autonomic failure. This study aimed at investigating possible associations between ...Leer más >
OBJECTIVES: Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a rare fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by parkinsonism, cerebellar ataxia and autonomic failure. This study aimed at investigating possible associations between mortality, 24H blood pressure (BP) level and variability, and drug treatments for orthostatic hypotension (OH) in MSA patients. METHODS: One hundred and twenty-nine patients followed at the French Reference Center for MSA who underwent routine 24H ambulatory BP monitoring, were included. Unified MSA Rating Scale (UMSARS) scores, drug treatments and the occurrence and cause of death were recorded. RESULTS: Seventy patients died during follow-up (2.9+/-1.8 years), mainly from terminal illness, pulmonary or sudden death. Multivariate Cox regression analysis, after adjustment for gender, disease duration and severity (UMSARS I+II score), showed that increased daytime systolic BP variability, OH severity and OH drug treatment were independently correlated with mortality. OH treatment was associated with the risk of cardiac causes and/or sudden death (p=0.01). In a fully adjusted model, male gender [(female vs male) Hazard ratio (HR): 0.56 95% CI [0.34-0.94] p=0.03], UMSARS I+II score [HR: 1.04 95% CI [1.02-1.06] p<0.01], systolic BP daytime variability [HR: 3.66 95% CI (1.46-9.17 p<0.01] and OH treatment [HR: 2.13 95 % CI [1.15- 3.94]; p=0.02] predicted mortality. CONCLUSION: Increased daytime BP variability and OH treatment were predictive of mortality in patients with MSA, independently from disease severity. Further studies are required to assess if these associations are explained by more severe autonomic dysfunction or if OH treatment exposes "per se" to a specific risk in this population.< Leer menos
Palabras clave en inglés
Autonomic failure
Blood pressure
Multiple System Atrophy
Orthostatic hypotension
Treatment