Sleep-time blood pressure correlates more strongly with adverse cardiovascular events than does daytime blood pressure. The BedMed trial evaluates whether bedtime antihypertensive administration, as compared with conventional morning use, reduces major adverse cardiovascular events. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Prospective randomised, open-label, blinded end-point trial.Hypertensive primary care patients using blood pressure lowering medication and free from glaucoma.Community primary care providers in 5 Canadian provinces (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario) are mailing invitations to their eligible patients. Social media campaigns (Google, Facebook) are additionally running in the same provinces.Consenting participants are allocated via central randomisation to bedtime vs morning use of all antihypertensives.(1) Telephone or email questionnaire at 1 week, 6 weeks, 6 months and every 6 months thereafter, and (2) accessing linked governmental healthcare databases tracking hospital and community medical services.Composite of all-cause death, or hospitalisation for myocardial infarction/acute-coronary syndrome, stroke or congestive heart failure.Each primary outcome element on its own, all-cause hospitalisation or emergency department visit, long-term care admission, non-vertebral fracture, new glaucoma diagnosis, 18-month cognitive decline from baseline (via Short Blessed Test).Self-reported nocturia burden at 6 weeks and 6 months (no, minor or major burden), 1-year self-reported overall health score (EQ-5D-5L), self-reported falls, total cost of care (acute and community over study duration) and mean sleep-time systolic blood pressure after 6 months (via 24-hour monitor in a subset of 302 sequential participants).Cox proportional hazards survival analysis.The trial will continue until a projected 254 primary outcome events have occurred.Enrolment ongoing (3227 randomised to date).
BedMed has ethics approval from six research ethics review boards and will publish results in a peer-reviewed journal.
NCT02990663.
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
About The Expert
Scott R Garrison
Michael R Kolber
G Michael Allan
Jeffrey Bakal
Lee Green
Alexander Singer
Darryl R Trueman
Finlay A McAlister
Raj S Padwal
Michael D Hill
Braden Manns
Kimberlyn McGrail
Braden O’Neill
Michelle Greiver
Liesbeth S Froentjes
Donna P Manca
Dee Mangin
Sabrina T Wong
Cathy MacLean
Jessica Em Kirkwood
Rita McCracken
James P McCormack
Colleen Norris
Tina Korownyk
References
PubMed