Primary Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Cross-over Trial to Identify Patient Characteristics That Predict Blood Pressure Response to Antihypertensive Therapy in General Practice
High blood pressure is an important risk factor for diseases of heart and blood vessels like
myocardial infarction and stroke. Many patients are not treated to target blood pressures,
even though good blood pressure lowering drugs are available. Not all blood pressure drugs
are equally effective in individual patients.
We hypothesize that individual patient characteristics can predict the best response on
different blood pressure lowering drugs. In this study we will investigate whether a set of
patient characteristics (anthropometric and laboratory) obtained before treatment may
predict the blood pressure lowering response to representatives of two groups of drugs:
those that inhibit renin-angiotensin system activity and those that decrease blood volume.
Population-wide elimination of hypertension would reduce the incidence of all stroke, MI and
heart failure with 30 to 50% and contribute to a reduction of between 25 to 50% of the total
mortality related to these cardiovascular conditions. However, despite increasing numbers of
antihypertensive medication prescriptions, hypertension control rates are still
insufficient.
The current study will focus on improving the success rate of the initial treatment of
hypertension. The individual response to antihypertensive drugs varies between individuals:
many patients responding well to one drug respond poorly to another. We hypothesize this
difference in response to depend on the presence of certain characteristics of patients,
like waist circumference, age and gender.
The major objective of our study will be to identify patient characteristics that predict
the efficacy of different classes of antihypertensive drugs. Despite pleas in international
publications to tailor antihypertensive treatment on individual basis, until now patient
characteristics are not taken into account in the medical treatment of hypertension. We will
address our study objective by the use of a PRospective, Open label (medication not blind),
Blinded End-point crossover design (PROBE) in which 100 general practice based, newly
diagnosed hypertensive patients, aged 18 - 65 years will be included to be treated with a
diuretic and an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB). Each patient will be treated with
standard doses of both medications consecutively. Treatment duration for each medication
will be four weeks, with a four weeks washout period in between. The choice for a diuretic
versus an ARB is based on the substantial difference in working mechanism representing the
two major determinants of blood pressure: effect on intravascular volume (diuretic) or
vascular tone (ARB). Blood pressures will be assessed with both 24 hour-monitoring and
practice based standardized measurements.
Twenty-three different patient characteristics will be studied and were selected based on
review of literature and pathophysiologic theory. These characteristics will be (1) simple
anthropometric measures like body mass index and fat distribution, (2) demographic
characteristics, such as gender or ethnicity or (3) disease characteristics such as baseline
diastolic and systolic blood pressure, co-morbidity and blood plasma levels of easily
measured bioactive compounds, like renin and B-type natriuretic peptide.
The primary outcome measure will be the difference in blood pressure response between both
study drugs; secondary outcome measures will be the difference in the number of patients
achieving target blood pressure and the number of adverse drug events.
We expect to find three to six significant patient characteristics that predict response to
antihypertensive medication in terms of blood pressure reduction.
If our study indeed identifies relevant patient characteristics GPs will be able to initiate
antihypertensive medical treatment more efficiently. We expect this will result in increased
initial therapeutic success and reduction of the number of antihypertensive drugs needed. As
a consequence we expect compliance and hypertension control rates to increase. These
expectations will need to be confirmed in a general practice-based follow-up study on
implementation in daily practice of the use of patient characteristics with compliance and
hypertension control rates as outcome measures.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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