Hypertension, Resistant to Conventional Therapy Clinical Trial
— PATHWAY2Official title:
Optimum Treatment for Drug-Resistant Hypertension
This study was recommended by NICE, as part of its 2006 guidance for the treatment of
hypertension, and is urgently required to provide evidence for the treatment recommendations
in patients with resistant hypertension. The study will be a randomised placebo-controlled
double-blind crossover comparison of an α-blocker (α), β-blocker (β), and K+-sparing
diuretic (∆).
Patients will have a BP at entry above target on ABPM or home monitoring despite supervised
administration of maximum tolerated doses of A+C+D. Over 48 weeks they will then receive, in
random order either placebo or two doses each of doxazosin (α), bisoprolol (β) or
spironolactone (∆). Each treatment cycle will last 12 weeks, with a forced dose-doubling at
6 weeks.
The time course for the study will be similar to study one. 340 patients will provide 90%
power, at α=0.01 to detect a 3 mmHg overall difference in home sBP between any one drug and
placebo, with spironolactone hypothesized to be best overall. The study will be able to
detect a 6 mmHg difference in sBP between each subject's best and second-best drug predicted
by tertile of plasma renin, justifying routine use of the measurement in patients with
resistant hypertension.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 348 |
Est. completion date | August 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | July 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years to 79 Years |
Eligibility |
Patients must meet ALL inclusion criteria - M/F 18-79 years - Patients with hypertension not controlled to target: clinic systolic BP = 5 mmHg above target (i.e. = 140 mmHg for non-diabetic hypertensives or = 135 mmHg for diabetics), under one of the following conditions: 1. Treatment for at least 3 months with lisinopril 20 mg (A) + amlodipine 10 mg (C) + bendroflumethiazide 2.5 mg (D) or their equivalents 2. Patients who have received the three drugs or equivalents specified in a), and are either intolerant to one category, or tolerate only a lower dose (e.g. amlodipine 5 mg or lisinopril 10 mg) 3. Patients receiving the three drugs or equivalents specified in a), who are receiving additional drugs for their hypertension, may be included if the investigator: 1) feels it is appropriate to stop these additional drugs at the screening visit and 2) anticipates that the BP criteria for inclusion will be met when re-checked at the baseline visit Patients may be included if the PI anticipates BP criteria for inclusion will be met at randomisation. - Patients with a home systolic BP average of >130 mmHg or within 15mmHg of clinic BP over the 4 days prior to the baseline visit. Exclusion; - Inability to give informed consent; - Participation in a clinical study involving an investigational drug or device within 4 weeks of screening; - Secondary or accelerated hypertension; - Type 1 diabetes; - eGFR<45 mls/min; - Plasma potassium outside of normal range on two successive measurements during screening; - Pregnancy, planning to conceive, or women of child-bearing potential not taking adequate contraception - Anticipated change of medical status during the trial - Absolute contra-indication to study drugs or previous intolerance of trial therapy; - Sustained atrial fibrillation; - Recent cardiovascular event requiring hospitalisation - Suspected non-adherence to antihypertensive treatment - Requirement for study drug for reason other than to treat hypertension, - Current therapy for cancer; - Concurrent chronic illness, likely to preclude 52 week participation in the study; - Clinic Systolic BP >200 mmHg or diastolic BP >120mmHg, with PI discretion to override if home BP measurements are lower - Any concomitant condition that may adversely affect the safety/ efficacy of study drug or severely limit that patients life-span or ability to complete the study - Treatment with any of the following medications; 1. Oral corticosteroids within 3 months of screening. Treatment with systemic corticosteroids is also prohibited during study participation; 2. Chronic stable use, or unstable use of NSAIDs (other than low dose aspirin) is prohibited. Chronic use defined as >3 consecutive or non-consecutive days of treatment per week. In addition intermittent use of NSAIDs is strongly discouraged; if required, must not be used for more than a total of 2 days. For those requiring analgesics; paracetamol is recommended. 3. The use of short acting nitrates is permitted, but must not be taken within 4 hours of screening or subsequent visits 4. The use of long acting nitrates is permitted but dose must be stable for at least 2 weeks prior to screening and randomisation; 5. The use of sympathomimetic decongestants is permitted;but not within 1 day prior to any study visit/BP assessment; 6. The use of theophylline is permitted but dose must be stable for 4 weeks prior to screening and throughout the study; 7. The use of phosphodiesterase type V inhibitors is permitted; however study participants must refrain from taking these medications for at least 1 day prior to screening or any subsequent study visits; 8. The use of alpha-blockers is not permitted, with the exception of afluzosin and tamsulosin for prostatic symptoms - A pill count will be made at the end of the 4 week run-in period and those with adherence <70% will be excluded from randomisation |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | NHS Ayrshire | Ayrshire | |
United Kingdom | University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust | Birmingham | |
United Kingdom | University of Birmingham | Birmingham | |
United Kingdom | University of Cambridge - Addenbrookes Hospital | Cambridge | |
United Kingdom | NHS Tayside/University of Dundee | Dundee | |
United Kingdom | NHS Lothian/University of Edinburgh | Edinburgh | |
United Kingdom | Royal Devon & Exeter NHS Foundation Trust | Exeter | |
United Kingdom | NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde/University of Glasgow | Glasgow | |
United Kingdom | Ixworth GP Practice | Ixworth | |
United Kingdom | University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust | Leicester | |
United Kingdom | Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry | London | |
United Kingdom | Guys and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust | London | |
United Kingdom | Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust | London | |
United Kingdom | Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust | Manchester | |
United Kingdom | Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital NHS Trust | Norwich | |
United Kingdom | West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust | Watford |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Cambridge | British Heart Foundation |
United Kingdom,
Black HR, Keck M, Meredith P, Bullen K, Quinn S, Koren A. Controlled-release doxazosin as combination therapy in hypertension: the GATES study. J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich). 2006 Mar;8(3):159-66; quiz 167-8. — View Citation
Brown MJ, Cruickshank JK, Dominiczak AF, MacGregor GA, Poulter NR, Russell GI, Thom S, Williams B; Executive Committee, British Hypertension Society. Better blood pressure control: how to combine drugs. J Hum Hypertens. 2003 Feb;17(2):81-6. Review. — View Citation
Deary AJ, Schumann AL, Murfet H, Haydock SF, Foo RS, Brown MJ. Double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover comparison of five classes of antihypertensive drugs. J Hypertens. 2002 Apr;20(4):771-7. — View Citation
Dickerson JE, Hingorani AD, Ashby MJ, Palmer CR, Brown MJ. Optimisation of antihypertensive treatment by crossover rotation of four major classes. Lancet. 1999 Jun 12;353(9169):2008-13. — View Citation
Kaplan NM. Resistant hypertension. J Hypertens. 2005 Aug;23(8):1441-4. Review. — View Citation
Law MR, Wald NJ, Morris JK, Jordan RE. Value of low dose combination treatment with blood pressure lowering drugs: analysis of 354 randomised trials. BMJ. 2003 Jun 28;326(7404):1427. — View Citation
NICE/BHS. CG34 Hypertension - NICE guideline (all the recommendations). http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/CG34/niceguidance /pdf/english 2006
Taler SJ, Textor SC, Augustine JE. Resistant hypertension: comparing hemodynamic management to specialist care. Hypertension. 2002 May;39(5):982-8. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Cardiac Index (L/min/m2) measured at baseline and the end of the 4 treatment cycles | This is assessed non-invasively. We hypothesize that patients in the highest quartile of cardiac index at baseline will respond more to beta-blockade (bisoprolol) than to other treatments, and that this parameter will be reduced more by beta-blockade than by other treatments. | 48 weeks | No |
Other | Systemic Vascular Resistance Index (dyne/sec/cm-5) measured at baseline and the end of the 4 treatment cycles | This is assessed non-invasively. We hypothesize that patients in the highest quartile of systemic vascular resistance at baseline will respond more to alpha-blockade (doxazosin) than to other treatments, and that this parameter will be reduced more by alpha-blockade than by other treatments. | 48 weeks | No |
Other | Thoracic fluid content (KOhm-1) measured at baseline and the end of the 4 treatment cycles | This is assessed non-invasively. We hypothesize that patients in the highest quartile of thoracic fluid content at baseline will respond more to additional diuretic (spironolactone) than to other treatments, and that this parameter will be reduced more by spironolactone than by other treatments. | 48 | No |
Other | Pulse wave velocity (m/s) measured at baseline and the end of the 4 treatment cycles | We hypothesize that this parameter will be reduced more by spironolactone than by other treatments. | 48 | No |
Other | Supine central systolic pressure (mmHg) measured at baseline and the end of the 4 treatment cycles | We hypothesize that this parameter will be reduced more by spironolactone than by other treatments. | 48 | No |
Other | Augmentation index (%) measured at baseline and the end of the 4 treatment cycles | We hypothesize that this parameter will be reduced more by spironolactone than by other treatments. | 48 | No |
Primary | Treatment arm comparison according to home blood pressure measurement | We will adopt a hierarchical procedure to test, in order, the differences in home systolic BP between spironolactone and placebo the average of the other two active drugs each of the other two drugs. The second and third tests will be carried out if and only if the preceding test(s) are significant (P<0.05). We shall use a mixed model to analyse home BP, with unstructured covariances for the repeated measures across the two doses for each treatment within a patient. The model will include terms for gender, age, height, weight, smoking history and a diagnosis of diabetes at baseline. We will also adjust for baseline BP. |
48 weeks | No |
Secondary | Measurement of plasma renin as predictor of effective treatment | The difference in home systolic BP averages between the best drug predicted by the patient's plasma renin (according to the 'a, ß, ?' rule cited above) and further diuretic therapy;ie with spironolactone, which we have predicted will be the most effective treatment on average. | 48 weeks | No |
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