Shifting Thresholds: Changes in Antihypertensive Eligibility Under the 2025 Versus 2017 Hypertension Guidelines
Faith E. Metlock, Bede N. Nriagu, Britton Scheuermann, Carl Ade, Yaa Adoma Kwapong, Alexander C. Razavi, Stephen Juraschek, Sharmaine M. McCoy, Lily N. Dastmalchi, Garima Sharma, Jared A. Spitz

TL;DR
The 2025 hypertension guidelines result in a small increase in the number of U.S. adults eligible for antihypertensive treatment compared to the 2017 guidelines.
Contribution
This study quantifies the population-level impact of updated hypertension treatment thresholds in the 2025 ACC/AHA guidelines.
Findings
Only a 0.7% net increase in treatment eligibility was observed under the 2025 guidelines.
Newly eligible adults were mostly older women with higher BMI and borderline glycemic measures.
Eligibility patterns remained stable across racial and ethnic groups and PREVENT model variants.
Abstract
Hypertension affects nearly half of U.S. adults. The 2025 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guideline adopts the Predicting Risk of Cardiovascular Disease Events (PREVENT) risk equations and updates treatment recommendations for stage 1 hypertension, potentially altering eligibility for antihypertensive therapy. The primary objective was to quantify changes in antihypertensive treatment eligibility under the 2025 vs 2017 guidelines. Secondary objectives were to characterize adults newly meeting treatment thresholds, assess concordance and discordance in eligibility, and evaluate robustness across PREVENT model variants. We conducted a simulation-based analysis using nationally representative National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data (2017-2020) among adults aged 30 to 79 years. Treatment eligibility was assigned using 2017 and 2025 guideline…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood Pressure and Hypertension Studies · Clinical practice guidelines implementation · Health Promotion and Cardiovascular Prevention
