Effect of valsartan, hydrochlorothiazide, and their combination on 24-h
ambulatory blood pressure response in elderly patients with systolic
hypertension: a ValVET substudy.
Author(s): Duprez DA, Weintraub HS, Cushman WC, Purkayastha D, Zappe D, Samuel R, Izzo JL
Jr.
Affiliation(s): University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA. dupre007@umn.edu
Publication date & source: 2011, Blood Press Monit. , 16(4):186-96
BACKGROUND: Stage 2 hypertension often requires combination antihypertensive
therapy. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is a useful tool for
studying antihypertensive drugs and their combinations.
OBJECTIVE: This multicenter, double-blind, parallel-group, prompted-titration
study of patients of at least 70 years of age with systolic hypertension compared
the efficacy of valsartan, hydrochlorothiazide, and their combination on
ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) reduction.
METHODS: After a 3-14-day washout, patients with systolic blood pressure of
150-200 mmHg were randomized (1 : 1 : 1) to initially receive once-daily
valsartan/hydrochlorothiazide 160/12.5 mg combination therapy,
hydrochlorothiazide 12.5 mg monotherapy, or valsartan 160 mg monotherapy.
Prompted uptitration of patients in whom BP was more than or equal to 140/90 mmHg
was performed after 4, 8, and 12 weeks of treatment. ABPM was performed at
baseline and weeks 4 and 16 (study end).
RESULTS: In this ABPM substudy (n=108), initiation of treatment with
valsartan/hydrochlorothiazide lowered ABP more effectively than either
monotherapy throughout the daytime, night-time, and 24-h monitoring periods, as
well as during the last 4 and 6-h dosing periods. Twenty-four-hour ABP was
reduced from 141.1/76.5 mmHg at baseline to 125.8/69.2 mmHg at week 4 (primary
time point) with valsartan/hydrochlorothiazide compared with reductions from
142.2/78.7 to 139.1/77.5 mmHg with hydrochlorothiazide and 142.2/78.3 to
136.4/75.1 mmHg with valsartan (all P<0.01 in favor of combination therapy). In
the overall study, tolerability was similar among the three treatment groups.
CONCLUSION: In elderly hypertensives, starting combination therapy with
valsartan/hydrochlorothiazide provides more effective 24-h blood pressure control
than the monotherapy components, with few therapy-related side-effects.
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