This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2015, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

Washington • Aiming lower saves more lives when it comes to controlling high blood pressure, says a major new study that could spur doctors to more aggressively treat patients over 50.

Patients who got their blood pressure well below today's usually recommended level significantly cut their risk of heart disease and death, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced Friday. The benefit was strong enough that NIH stopped the study about a year early.

"This study provides potentially life-saving information," declared Gary Gibbons, director of NIH's National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI).

The University of Utah was one of the five centers coordinating the work of about 100 medical centers that recruited 9,300 patients for the research.

U. kidney specialist Alfred Cheung was the principal investigator, leading 17 of the centers, including the Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Intermountain Health Care, for one part of the study. Altogether, 264 Utahns participated in the research, according to a U. spokesman.

Doctors have long debated how low blood-pressure patients need to go, especially as they get older. Friday's results are preliminary, and researchers stressed that they shouldn't alter patient care just yet. But if the full results pan out, they eventually could influence treatment guidelines.

"This study certainly supports that lower is better," said Mark Creager, president of the American Heart Association, who wasn't involved with the new study. He called the research a possible roadmap to treatment strategies "that will save a significant amount of lives."

About 1 in 3 adults in the U.S. has high blood pressure, raising the risk of heart attacks, stroke, kidney failure and other health problems.

Normal blood pressure is less than a measurement of 120 over 80. High blood pressure is diagnosed once that measurement reaches, or passes, 140 over 90. Only about half of diagnosed patients have their blood pressure under control.

Today's treatment guidelines are mixed but generally recommend getting that top number — called the systolic pressure — down to about 140 in generally healthy adults and to 130 in patients who also have kidney disease or diabetes.

The institute sponsored a nationwide study to test if that's the best goal, or if aiming lower would either help or harm. Starting in 2010, more than 9,300 patients with high blood pressure were enrolled in the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT). Half received an average of about two medications with the goal of lowering their systolic pressure below 140. The other half received an average of three medications with the goal of getting below 120.

The more aggressively treated patients saw their risk of death drop by almost 25 percent compared to the less-controlled patients, researchers said. And rates of cardiovascular problems dropped by almost 30 percent in the better-controlled group.

Researchers wouldn't give precise numbers, or information about side effects, data that's expected when the full study is published in a scientific journal by year's end.

But preliminary results suggest treatment was "extremely well-tolerated," said SPRINT investigator Jackson Wright of Case Western Reserve University.

One question is whether older patients need to get their blood pressure as low as middle-aged patients do, or if doing so increases the seniors' risk of side effects, including falls. Last year, an expert panel sparked debate by recommending that the treatment target for patients over 60 be a systolic pressure of 150.

The average age of SPRINT participants was 68, and a quarter of them were over 75. The heart association's Creager said doctors will examine closely how those older patients fared.

Researchers also will continue tracking SPRINT participants to see if kidney disease, brain function and dementia were affected by more aggressive care.

Meanwhile, what's the advice for patients now struggling to control their blood pressure?

"The important public health message is to speak with their health care providers," said NHLBI heart specialist George Mensah.

Everyone should know their blood pressure, added Creager, director of the Heart and Vascular Center at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. Risks for heart disease begin gradually rising as blood pressure gets above 120, even if people never cross the line into full-blown hypertension.

Good diets, physical activity and keeping a healthy weight help avoid high blood pressure, and can help to lower it before medications are required or used in combination with them.

But once high blood pressure is diagnosed, getting treatment is more important than the debate over how low to go, Creager said. That's an individual decision based on the person's overall health, and many people aren't reaching today's recommended levels.

"The worst thing people with high blood pressure can do is ignore it," he said.

The Salt Lake Tribune contributed to this report