|
E-mail this page to a friend!
Senior Citizen Health & Medicine
High Blood Pressure May be Controlled Best by Pill
with Combined Medicines
May increase hypertension control rates from
36% to over 80%
May 21, 2007 - Millions of older Americans,
including more than half of all senior citizens, take
medications for hypertension but many do not achieve control of their blood
pressure. Single-tablet combinations of drugs may be what it takes to
get blood pressure under control, even in people with moderate
hypertension, according to results from a new international study
involving more than 10,700 people with high blood pressure. This is the
second study to recently announce good results with combo pills.
| |
Related Stories |
|
| |
Combo Drug Caduet Better for High Blood Pressure than Lipitor and
Norvasc
One-pill program also much less expensive say researchers
at American Heart Association Forum
May 11, 2007
Large Studies Show New Treatments Slowing Heart
Failure Deaths
Changes occur as hospitals increase use of certain
drugs, tests, procedures
May 2, 2007
Diabetes, High Blood Pressure Trump Race in Causing
Heart Failure Among Older Americans
African-Americans have more heart failure because
they have more diabetes, hypertension
March 27, 2007
Some High Blood Pressure Treatments May Increase
Heart Attack Risk
'Failure of calcium channels as we age has
flagged up a warning sign'
March 15, 2007
New Type Medicine Approved by FDA to Treat High
Blood Pressure
Tekturna is first of new class of drugs called
direct renin inhibitors
March 7, 2007
Older Men Regularly Taking Over-the-Counter Pain
Relievers have Risk of High Blood Pressure
Previous studies of women have found similar
results
Feb. 26, 2007
Beta-Blockers Should Not Be First Choice for High
Blood Pressure
Slightly higher risk of death, cardiovascular
disease than using calcium channel blockers
Feb. 21, 2007
Men with High Blood Pressure Drinking Moderate
Amounts of Alcohol May Lower Risk of Heart Attack
Also found rates of stroke and death from heart
disease did not differ from non-drinkers
January 2, 2007
Hypertension Guidelines Fail to Improve Blood
Pressure Control in Diabetics
Second
study finds adolescent pupil size predicts later complications; ADA
publishes new clinical practice recommendations
December 27, 2006
High Blood Pressure is Latest Major Topic on NIH's
Senior Citizen Health Site
'The Silent Killer' is the 29th health topic
added to NIHSeniorHealth
September 20, 2006
Ten Steps Senior Citizens Can Take to Control High
Blood Pressure
Plus info from
National Institute on Aging abut hypertension
August 28, 2006
Read the latest news on Senior
Health & Medicine |
|
Just six months of treatment was enough to bring
the blood pressure of 73 percent of patients into an acceptable range,
with an average reading of 132/74 mmHg. Thats a near-doubling of the
proportion that started the study with their hypertension under control
-- despite the fact that nearly all patients came into the study on
other medication before switching to one of the two-drug combinations
used in the study.
A year later, after 18 months of treatment,
patients continued to have good blood pressure control. In fact, more
than 80 percent of participants from the United States achieved control,
with a mean systolic blood pressure of 129mmHg. This is exceptional news
in that only 36 percent of study subjects in the U.S. treated by
clinicians achieve a blood pressure of 140/90.
The news was also good among people with diabetes
or kidney disease who need to aim for lower blood pressures than
others in order to reduce their risk of heart disease and stroke, but
who often have a harder time getting their BP down. People with diabetes
in the study achieved a mean systolic BP of 131 mmHg while those with
chronic kidney disease were at 136 mmHg. These groups also saw sustained
blood pressure control.
There were few side effects in the study
volunteers, despite the fact that doses were increased steadily. Only
1.8 percent of patients had an episode where their blood pressure
dropped too low a potential effect of aggressive BP treatment.
These data suggest strongly that single tablets
containing two drugs will control the vast majority of patients who are
taking medication but have not achieved ideal blood pressure. These data
may affect the blood pressure control of over 38 million Americans,
says study leader and lead author Ken Jamerson, M.D. a professor of
cardiovascular medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School and
member of the U-M Cardiovascular Center.
Jamerson presented the 18-month data today at the
American Society of Hypertension meeting in Chicago, on behalf of his
colleagues involved in the ACCOMPLISH clinical trial. The six-month data
are published simultaneously in the journal Blood Pressure.
The goal of the ACCOMPLISH study, begun in 2003 and
funded by Novartis, is to compare the impact of two different two-drug
combinations on the long-term health of a global sample of people with
hypertension. Novartis markets single-pill forms of both two-drug
products, but they are also available separately as individual drugs.
The Drug Combinations
The trial randomly assigned patients to one of two
drug combinations. Both combinations contained a drug called benazepril
(Lotensin),
which belongs to a class of medicines known as ACE inhibitors. The other
drug in one of the combinations is a diuretic called
hydrochlorothiazide; in the other combination pill, its a drug called
amlodipine, one of a class of medicines called calcium channel blockers.
Lotrel is the marketed pill containing
benazepril and amlodipine. Lotensin HCT contains benazepril and
hydrochlorothiazide.
It is too early to say if one of the combinations
surpasses the other in bringing blood pressure down or in preventing
cardiovascular problems and death.
But because many studies have already shown that
reducing blood pressure can reduce the risk of stroke, heart attack,
heart failure and other conditions, achieving blood pressure control in
large percentages of high-risk people is an accomplishment in itself,
says Jamerson.
Currently, blood pressure treatment guidelines call
for a single medicine to be tried first in people with Stage 1
hypertension -- those with the top, or systolic, reading over 140 and
the bottom, or diastolic, reading over 90, but with readings less than
160 systolic and 100 diastolic.
As many as 60 million Americans have high blood
pressure. But because high BP doesnt cause symptoms, most people who
have it dont know it. Over time, uncontrolled blood pressure affects
the blood vessel walls, encouraging the growth of weak spots called
aneurysms and the formation of narrowed and inflamed areas that can lead
to clots that can break off and cause heart attacks and strokes.
Only 30 percent of Americans who have high blood
pressure, and only 60 percent of those taking medicines for
hypertension, currently have their blood pressure under control.
Fortunately, once the condition is diagnosed,
doctors have a broad range of medicines to choose from to try to get it
under control, including many inexpensive generic medicines.
But studies have found that patients often have
trouble taking the multiple medications they need. As a result, many
companies have developed combination pills. The ACCOMPLISH data suggest
these combination tablets have the potential to improve control rates to
over 80 percent.
ACCOMPLISH stands for Avoiding Cardiovascular
Events through Combination Therapy in Patients Living with Systolic
Hypertension.
Editor's Notes:
In addition to Jamerson, the studys authors
include Bertram Pitt and Sverre Kjeldsen of the U-M Cardiovascular
Center; senior author Michael Weber of SUNY Downstate Medical College;
George Bakris of the University of Chicago; Bjorn Dahlof of Sahlgrenska
University Hospital in Sweden; Eric Velazquez of Duke University;
Jitendra Gupte, Martin Lefkowitz, Allen Hester and Victor Shi of
Novartis; William Cushman of the University of Tennessee and Vasilios
Papademetriou of Georgetown University.
Click to More Senior News on the
Front Page
Copyright: SeniorJournal.com |