Assessing Hypertension Care for Aged Veterans: Balancing Risks and Benefits

NIH RePORTER · VA · I01 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

 DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Hypertension, the most commonly-treated condition in the VHA, affects more than 80% of older Veterans. With continuing improvements in quality of VHA care, more older Veterans meet blood pressure (BP) targets than older patients in Medicare. Despite known benefits of BP control, one concern as Veterans age and accumulate multiple conditions is that overly-aggressive control may result in unintended outcomes such as falls. We propose to better understand both cardiovascular benefits and fall injury risks associated with overly-aggressive hypertension care. This work will lead to a development of a novel measure of harmful or wasteful BP treatment for > 1.6 million Veterans. The VHA has been highly successful at improving BP control, exceeding performance on existing BP measures by 79% versus only 62% in Medicare. Older individuals stand to benefit from good BP control, especially in stroke reduction. However, older individuals are at risk of falls due to polypharmacy. One concern is that our existing dichotomous BP targets result in inadvertently-low BPs, especially as aging Veterans develop geriatric conditions such as falls. We have previously found that nearly one-third of older Veterans with diabetes are potentially-over-treated. Whether or not VHA providers should consider de-intensifying BP care in older Veterans has not been well-studied. We aim to define Aggressive Hypertension Care (AHC) in Veterans age 65 and older using national VHA databases. First, we will validate data elements of AHC using medical record review. Next, we will test whether AHC (in comparison to adequate care) is associated with falls injury, and whether the risks outweigh reduction in strokes and cardiac events. Last, we will measure inter-facility variation in AHC. We will involve VHA providers throughout these Aims to review results, guide analytic decisions and provide early identification of potential barriers to implementation. By the end of the award, we aim to develop a novel measure of appropriate hypertension care of relevance to older Veterans specific to age group, co-morbidity burden, and baseline risk for cardiovascular and fall events. Aim 1 (Validating data elements of AHC): Working with our provider panels and steering committee, we will review data elements of AHC (BP < 130/65 mmHg in combination with continuing 3+ or escalating 1+ BP medications) for appropriateness in older Veterans age 65 and older. Then, in a small subsample, we will validate the data elements by full review of the electronic health record. Aim 2 (Harms and Benefits of AHC): In Sub-Aim 2A, We will use the Health and Retirement Study which captures both interview-based fall injury and diagnostic injury data from Medicare, thus facilitating development of a fall injur severity algorithm that we can apply to the VHA-Medicare data. Then, in Sub-Aim 2B, we will use two years of VHA data merged with Medicare to test whether AHC (compar...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10146199
Project number
5I01HX001611-02
Recipient
VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION
Principal Investigator
Lillian Chiang Min
Activity code
I01
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
Award type
5
Project period
2015-10-01 → 2019-12-31