Hypertension Clinical Trial
To determine whether treatment with antidepressant, anticonvulsant, and antiarrhythmic drug therapies having the potential for proarrhythmia increased the risk of primary cardiac arrest. The aim of the original grant, starting in 1990 and ending in 1994, was to determine whether use of diuretics for hypertension increased the risk of primary cardiac arrest compared to the use of other antihypertensive agents.
BACKGROUND:
The original grant from 1990 to 1995 was funded because analyses of clinical trial subgroups
had raised the concern that, in patients with high blood pressure, diuretic therapy may
increase the risk of sudden cardiac death. Given the size of the hypertensive population in
the United States, the prevalence of diuretic therapy for hypertension, and the persistent
concerns regarding the relation of diuretic therapy to the risk of primary cardiac arrest
(PCA), the study proved to be of particular interest to clinicians, epidemiologists, public
policy makers, and the general public.
Beginning in 1995 when the grant was renewed, unexpected findings from the Cardiac
Arrhythmia Suppression Trial--an adverse effect on mortality of two antiarrhythmic drug
therapies--had heightened concerns that drug therapies other than diuretics may increase the
risk of primary cardiac arrest.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The original study beginning in 1990 was population-based with a case-control design. Using
the community-based surveillance system for out-of-hospital primary cardiac arrest in
Seattle and King County, Washington, all cases of primary cardiac arrest (PCA) were
identified which had occurred among 18,000 pharmacologically-treated hypertensive patients
receiving care at Group Health Cooperative (GHC) from 1977-1993. Approximately 180 cases
were identified. Controls were obtained from a random sample of GHC enrollees with
pharmacologically-treated hypertension, matched to cases at a ratio of 3 to 1, according to
age, gender, and year of occurrence of PCA. The computerized pharmacy data base of GHC
allowed ascertainment of patterns of exposure to specific antihypertensive drug therapy in
an identical fashion for both cases and controls. Medical records were reviewed to gather
information about potential confounding factors and effect modifiers, such as severity of
hypertension. Data analysis, using stratification and logistic regression, determined
whether use of diuretics increased the risk of PCA compared to use of other antihypertensive
agents; whether the risk of PCA depended upon the dose of diuretic therapy; and whether
electrocardiographic abnormalities modified the risk of PCA associated with diuretics.
The study was renewed in 1995 to determine whether treatment with antidepressant,
anticonvulsant, and antiarrhythmic drug therapies having the potential for proarrhythmia
increased the risk of primary cardiac arrest. The study was a population-based case-control
study nested within a cohort of patients who received medical care at a large pre-paid
Health Care Plan in Seattle, Washington. Cases were patients who had a primary cardiac
arrest between 1977 to 1994. Controls were a stratified random sample of patients,
frequency-matched to cases by age, gender, calendar-year, and known heart disease. Treatment
with drugs was assessed through a computerized pharmacy database. Ambulatory-care medical
records were reviewed to assess clinical characteristics, including the indication for
therapy, the severity of heart disease, co-existing morbidity, and other risk factors. For
both antidepressant and anticonvulsant drugs, analyses were stratified by known heart
disease, because the risk of treatment might be particularly large among patients with known
heart disease. For antiarrhythmic drugs, analyses were restricted by a single, current
indication for the therapy--maintenance of sinus rhythm among patients with chronic atrial
fibrillation; and, by the availability of a prior echocardiogram, in order to control for
the type and severity of underlying heart disease. After adjustment for potential
confounders, the investigators estimated the relative safety of: 1) drugs within the same
therapeutic class; and, 2) the dosage schedule for specific drugs. In addition, they
determined if concurrent treatment with other drugs that altered cardiac conduction or
morbidity that altered drug disposition influenced the risk among patients treated with a
drug therapy.
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