City
Epaper

New online tool to transform how high blood pressure is treated

By IANS | Updated: August 29, 2025 12:45 IST

New Delhi, Aug 29 A global team of researchers from India, Australia, the US, and the UK has ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 29 A global team of researchers from India, Australia, the US, and the UK has developed a novel online-based tool which can transform how hypertension is managed, allowing doctors to choose a treatment for each patient based on the degree to which they need to lower their blood pressure.

The 'blood pressure treatment efficacy calculator' is built on data from nearly 500 randomised clinical trials in over 100,000 people. It allows doctors to see how different medications are likely to lower blood pressure.

“We cannot overlook the importance of controlling high blood pressure effectively and efficiently. Achieving optimal control requires a clear understanding of the efficacy of antihypertensive drugs at different doses and in various combinations. Without clarity on what we want to achieve and how to achieve it, we will not meet our targets. Guidelines define the target blood pressure, while our online tool helps identify which antihypertensive drugs are best suited to reach that target,” said Dr. Mohammad Abdul Salam, from The George Institute for Global Health, Hyderabad.

A single antihypertensive medication -- still the most common way treatment is started -- typically lowers systolic BP by just 8-9 mmHg, while most patients need reductions of 15-30 mmHg to reach ideal targets.

Nelson Wang, cardiologist and Research Fellow at the Institute, noted that while the traditional way of doing this is by measuring blood pressure directly for each patient and adjusting treatment accordingly, BP readings are far too variable, or ‘noisy’, for it to be reliable.

The new tool, described in research published in The Lancet, helps overcome this challenge by calculating the average treatment effect seen across hundreds of trials.

It also categorises treatments as low, moderate, and high intensity, based on how much they lower blood pressure (BP) -- an approach already routinely used in cholesterol-lowering treatment.

High blood pressure is one of the world’s biggest health challenges, affecting as many as 1.3 billion people and leading to around ten million deaths each year.

Often called a silent killer as it does not cause any symptoms on its own, it can remain hidden until it leads to a heart attack, stroke, or kidney disease. Fewer than one in five people with hypertension have it under control.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyIndia’s white-collar job market ends this fiscal strong led by non‑IT, AI hiring

EntertainmentEktaa Kapoor shares how Akshay Kumar returned her the cheque after their earlier collaboration failed at box-office

BusinessIndia’s white-collar job market ends this fiscal strong led by non‑IT, AI hiring

NationalNDA will form govt in Tamil Nadu with absolute majority: G. Kishan Reddy

NationalMaha: Akash More files nomination as joint candidate for Congress, RSP, and VBA​

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndian Railways approves Rs 1,364 crore to expand Kavach, modern signalling systems

TechnologyOver 18 crore LPG cylinders delivered since March 1, adequate rice and wheat stocks available: Govt

Technology16 Indian-flagged vessels with 433 seafarers remain in Persian Gulf: Govt

TechnologyMusk' Tesla opens 1st in-mall charging station in Navi Mumbai

TechnologyIndia adds highest-ever 6.05 GW wind energy in FY26, 46 pc jump from FY25