Telmisartan and Losartan in Hypertensive IGT
Information source: Medical University of Graz
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on June 20, 2008 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Hypertension; Impaired Glucose Tolerance
Intervention: Telmisartan 80 mg (Drug); Losartan 50 mg (Drug)
Phase: Phase 4
Status: Completed
Sponsored by: Medical University of Graz Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Thomas C. Wascher, MD, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: Medical University of Graz
Summary
Inhibition of RAS delays onset of diabetes in clinical studies. Preliminary evidence suggests
that telmisartan may have unique metabolic properties compared to other ARB due to activation
of PPARγ.
This should be tested in comparison with an ARB that is metabolically neutral in already
published studies.
H0: Telmisartan is not different from Losartan with respect to metabolic and vascular
effects.
H1: Telmisartan is different from Losartan with respect to metabolic and vascular effects.
Clinical Details
Official title: Telmisartan vs. Losartan in Hypertensive Patients With Impaired Glucose Tolerance: A Comparison of Their Antihypertensive, Metabolic, and Vascular Effects
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind, Active Control, Crossover Assignment, Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: HOMA indexISI FMD Blood pressure surge in the morning
Detailed description:
Background: Both, ACE-inhibitors as well as angiotensin-II-type-1 (AT1) receptor antagonists
seem to reduce the development of type-II diabetes in patients with hypertension and/or high
vascular risk (1-3). The major drawback of that evidence is that it derives from post-hoc
analyses in studies with rather poor metabolic phenotypisation of the populations included.
Additionally, all that evidence is based on measurements of fasting plasma glucose.
In subjects with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), insulin resistance and dysfunction of
pancreatic beta-cells (in variable contribution) have already established increased
postprandial hyperglycemia with a consecutively increased cardiovascular risk (4, 5). In
addition they have a considerable risk for future development of manifest type-II diabetes in
the range of 3-6 % within a year (6, 7). In such patients prevention of diabetes may also
result in cardiovascular prevention. As subjects with IGT often exhibit a more or less
pronounced metabolic syndrome, hypertension is a frequently found comorbidity and vice versa
IGT is frequent in hypertensive patients suggesting a possible common soil of the two
diseases (8).
Given these evidences, hypertensive subjects with IGT are a very suitable target population
to study metabolic and vascular effects of an angiotensin-II-type-1-receptor antagonist.
Finally, it has to be acknowledged that insulin resistance needs to be seen in the context of
the proinflammatory changes of the metabolic syndrome, the endothelial dysfunction associated
and the possibly central role of the adipocyte (Fig. 1). Within that context, the hypothesis
was put forward that blockade of the angiotensin system might prevent type-II diabetes via
effects on fat cells (9).
Rationale: The effects of different angiotensin-II-type-1-receptor antagonists on insulin
sensitivity have been investigated in various studies with different, either positive (10) or
negative (11, 12) results but no in-depht investigations into detailed metabolic and vascular
effects have been performed.
Telmisartan is an angiotensin-II-type-1-receptor antagonist that very recently has been
described to possess the specific properties of a partial activator of PPARγ (13). This
effect is not found for other comparable compunds such as losartan. Genes of whom the
expression is under control of that receptor are centrally involved into the pathology of the
metabolic syndrome as outlined above and activation of that receptor results in improved
insulin sensitivity, ameliorated endothelial dysfunction, reduced inflammation and
potentially preserved beta-cell function (for review see (14)). Therefore, telmisartan is a
candidate that might possess very specific beneficial properties in addition to its
antihypertensive effects.
Objective: To compare the metabolic and vascular effects of telmisartan and metoprolol in
hypertensive patients with IGT.
Eligibility
Minimum age: 40 Years.
Maximum age: 75 Years.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- IGT according the criteria of the WHO
- standardised office blood pressure > 140/90 mmHG or treated hypertension
- 40 - 75 years of age
- signed informed consent
Exclusion Criteria:
- known hypersensitivity towards telmisartan or losartan
- concommitant treatment with ACE-inhibitors
- BMI > 35 kg/m2
- inability to perform self-control of blood pressure
- acute coronary syndrome or cerebrovascular event within the last 3 months
- Revascularisation within the last 3 months
- heart failure > NYHA 2
Locations and Contacts
Medical University of Graz, Graz 8036, Austria
Additional Information
Starting date: January 2005
Ending date: June 2006
Last updated: December 4, 2006
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