Hypertension, Resistant to Conventional Therapy Clinical Trial
Official 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.
In published surveys throughout the world the majority of patients with hypertension do not
achieve target blood pressure. According to most guidelines including NICE, target blood
pressure is 130/80 mmHg in patients with diabetes, 140/90 mmHg in other patients. In the UK
there are currently at least 3 million people with treated hypertension whose blood pressure
is not controlled. A significant number of these patients will have drug resistant
hypertension, defined as:
"a blood pressure that is not adequately controlled to recommended treatment targets despite
treatment with maximal recommended and tolerated doses of 3 drugs according to the current
BHS/NICE guidelines and treatment algorithm, i.e. (*ACE-inhibitor or *ARB or direct renin
inhibitor + *CCB + Diuretic (any diuretic except spironolactone), i.e. A+C+D)".
(*where ACE-inhibitor=angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, ARB=angiotensin receptor
blocker, CCB=calcium channel blocker)
The causes of treatment resistance are unknown, and the choice of fourth-line drug almost
entirely empirical. At present there is little comparative data for available drugs. There
is considerable evidence pointing to Na+ retention as a common culprit, and some data
supporting additional diuretics, or alpha blockade in resistant hypertension, though mainly
added to two rather than three drugs.20,29,30 A retrospective analysis of two-drug
combinations in trials reported that it makes no difference what is combined with what. 31
However, this conclusion conflicts with the view that drugs for hypertension fall into two
main categories, acting respectively on the renin and volume components of hypertension, and
that most benefit can be derived from combining drugs from different categories.10,32
Despite the successful adoption of the BHS/NICE treatment algorithm for the treatment of
hypertension, there remains substantial clinical uncertainty about the preferred clinical
management of people with drug resistant hypertension. This is an important question because
such patients are at the highest risk for cardiovascular events. The current guidelines
acknowledge that there is currently no adequate clinical trial evidence upon which to base
recommendations for the preferred 4th line drug treatment for those with resistant
hypertension.
It is possible that it makes no difference what drug is added as fourth-line treatment and
that the response, on average, will be the same for all classes. Alternatively, it is also
possible that one class of drug will always be superior to all the others because the
mechanism underpinning resistant hypertension is common to all patients. In this regard, a
popular view is that resistant hypertension is invariably due to excessive sodium retention
and thus "further diuretic therapy" will always be the most effective treatment. A third
possibility is that resistant hypertension is a heterogeneous state and that the study of
average responses in cohorts in clinical studies masks substantial individual patient
differences.
With regard to this, this study will address the hypothesis that the renin status of the
patient defines the response to 4th line treatment in resistant hypertension, i.e. that low
renin predicts sodium retention and the best response to diuretic therapy, whereas high
renin predicts a better response to drugs that suppress renin, i.e. a β-blocker.
Hypothesis and Novel Aspects of the Trial
The primary hypothesis of the study is that the commonest cause of resistant hypertension is
excessive Na+-retention, and that further diuretic therapy (spironolactone used in this
study) will be superior to other potential "add-on drugs" for people with inadequate blood
pressure control despite treatment with optimal or highest tolerated doses of the three drug
classes recommended by the BHS/NICE treatment algorithm, i.e. A+C+D.
The main secondary objective is to use plasma renin measurements to evaluate an 'α, β, ∆'
rule for the selection of the 4th line drug for patients with drug resistant hypertension -
where α represents α-blockade, β represents β-blockade and ∆ represents "further diuretic
therapy" as cited above. The main secondary hypothesis states that plasma renin (measured on
a background of 3 drugs, i.e. A+C+D), will predict the most effective 4th line drug. We
propose that:
α-blockade will be the most effective 4th line drug at lowering BP in patients in the
mid-tertile of plasma renin, expected to be ≥20mU/L but <100mU/L; β-blockade will be the
most effective drug when renin is in the top tertile (expected to be ≥100Mu/L) as the drug
blocks renin secretion; Further diuretic therapy with spironolactone will be most effective
when plasma renin is in the lowest tertile (expected to be <20mU/L), indicative of excessive
sodium retention.
The study will also evaluate whether the routine use of plasma renin to predict best
treatment in individual patients with resistant hypertension will be more cost-effective
than using further diuretic therapy indiscriminately as the preferred 4th line drug for all
patients.
Finally the study will investigate whether non-invasive assessment of haemodynamic
parameters indicative of sodium retention and volume status, i.e. cardiac output, peripheral
resistance and bioimpedance, can be used to predict the response to each drug in the α, β, ∆
sequence.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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