The Overestimation of Elevated Systolic Blood Pressure: A Call for More Individualized Clinical Reasoning
The management of hypertension has been shaped by decades of evolving guidelines that progressively lower the threshold at which treatment of elevated systolic blood pressure (SBP) is recommended. While these changes are presented as advances in patient care and longevity, they raise a legitimate and underexplored question: do current guidelines genuinely reflect patient benefit, or do they partly reflect the commercial interests of an expanding antihypertensive drug market ? The trend toward stricter SBP thresholds is well documented. Over recent decades, the boundary defining hypertension has shifted downward considerably, enlarging the population eligible for pharmacological treatment. This shift coincides with a growing market for antihypertensive agents, and the convergence of clinical recommendation and commercial opportunity deserves honest scrutiny. The concern is not that treatment is ineffective, but that the threshold for when it becomes necessary may be set too low for man...