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6768479 
Journal Article 
Review 
Diuretic antihypertensive drugs and incident dementia risk: a systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression of prospective studies 
Tully, PJ; Hanon, O; Cosh, S; Tzourio, C 
2016 
Journal of Hypertension
ISSN: 0263-6352
EISSN: 1473-5598 
34 
1027-1035 
English 
OBJECTIVE: Diuretic drugs have been a mainstay of hypertension treatment in the elderly however their dementia sparing effects are under-reported. The objective was to quantify dementia risk in relation to diuretic antihypertensive drugs.

METHODS: Electronic databases were searched until June 2015.

ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: population, adults without dementia from primary care, community cohort, residential/institutionalized, or randomized controlled trial; exposure, diuretic antihypertensive drug; comparison, no diuretic drug, other or no antihypertensive drug, placebo-control; outcome, incident dementia diagnosed by standardized criteria. Adjusted hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were pooled in fixed-effects models with RevMan 5.3 (The Nordic Cochrane Centre, Copenhagen, Denmark) and the findings rated according to The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation criteria.

RESULTS: A total of 15 articles were included (52 599 persons, 3444 dementia cases, median age 76.1 years) and median follow-up was 6.1 years. Diuretics were associated with reduced dementia risk (HR 0.83; 95% CI 0.76-0.91, P < 0.0001, I = 0) and Alzheimer's disease risk (HR 0.82; 95% CI 0.71-0.94, P = 0.004, I = 0). Stratified analysis indicated a difference between potassium sparing, thiazide and loop diuretics (P = 0.01). Risk estimates were generally consistent comparing monotherapy vs. combination therapy, study design and follow-up. Meta-regression showed that demographics, stroke, heart failure, diabetes, liver disease, attrition, mortality rate, cognitive function, and apolipoprotein E allele did not moderate the results.

CONCLUSION: Diuretic antihypertensive drugs were associated with a consistent reduction in dementia risk without heterogeneity, pointing to generalizability of these findings.

REGISTRATION: PROSPERO [CRD42015023428].