Comparison of Awakening Versus Bedtime Dosing of Ramipril in Subjects With Essential Hypertension
Information source: University of Vigo
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on February 12, 2009 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Hypertension
Intervention: Ramipril (Drug); ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (Device)
Phase: Phase 4
Status: Recruiting
Sponsored by: University of Vigo Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Ramon C Hermida, PhD, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: University of Vigo
Overall contact: Ramon C Hermida, PhD, Phone: 34986812148, Email: rhermida@uvigo.es
Summary
This prospective chronotherapy trial will investigate the potential differing efficacy of
ramipril in doses from 5 to 10 mg/day when administered, as a monotherapy either upon
awakening from nighttime sleep or at bedtime, to diurnally active patients with grade 1 or 2
essential hypertension, who will be evaluated by 48-hour ABPM before and after pharmacologic
intervention. The benefits from this trial may be extremely important, taking into account 1)
the high prevalence of non-dipping among patients with essential hypertension, 2) the need
for a proper 24-hour BP control with particular emphasis on the regulation of nighttime
resting BP mean, and 3) the lacking information on the administration-time dependent effects
on BP of ramipril, a widely used ACEI in doses of 5-10 mg/day.
Clinical Details
Official title: A Prospective, Randomized, Open Label, Blinded-Endpoint Study to Compare Awakening Versus Bedtime Administration of 5-10 mg Ramipril in Terms of Systolic Blood Pressure Lowering Determined by ABPM in Subjects With Mild-to-Moderate Essential
Study design: Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Parallel Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Primary outcome: To demonstrate the efficacy of bedtime administration of ramipril in subjects with essential hypertension by testing the hypothesis of superior nocturnal SBP lowering in ABPM measurements compared with ramipril administered on awakening
Secondary outcome: To demonstrate that ramipril at bedtime is more effective than ramipril upon awakening in terms of nocturnal DBP lowering in ABPMTo demonstrate that ramipril at bedtime is not inferior to ramipril upon awakening in terms of 24-hour SBP/DBP lowering in ABPM To demonstrate that ramipril at bedtime is more effective than ramipril upon awakening in terms of increasing the diurnal/nocturnal SBP and DBP ratio determined by ABPM To demonstrate that ramipril at bedtime offers a similar safety profile than ramipril upon awakening To demonstrate that compliance with ramipril at bedtime is similar to compliance of ramipril upon awakening
Detailed description:
Several attributes of the cardiovascular system, including blood pressure (BP) and heart rate
(HR), are characterized by predictable changes during the 24 hours for the most part in
synchrony with the rest-activity cycle. During the past two decades specific features of the
24-hour BP pattern have been assessed as potential sources of injury to target tissues and as
triggers of cardiac and cerebrovascular events in hypertensive patients. A growing number of
studies indicate the reduction of the normal 10 to 20% sleep-time BP decline (non-dipper
pattern) is associated with elevated risk of end-organ injury, particularly to the heart
(left ventricular hypertrophy and myocardial infarct), brain (stoke) and kidney (albuminuria
and progression to end-stage renal failure). Accordingly, there is growing interest in how to
tailor the treatment of hypertensive patients according to their circadian BP pattern.
Clinical studies demonstrated a different effect of the ACEIs benazepril, enalapril,
perindopril, quinapril, spirapril, and trandolapril when dosed in the morning versus the
evening. A small trial on 33 patients with essential hypertension showed that a low dose of
2. 5 mg/day ramipril more effectively reduced daytime BP when it was administered in the
morning and more effectively reduced nighttime BP when it was administered in the evening. In
the HOPE (Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation) study patients in the active treatment group
received ramipril at bedtime. Results from a small substudy, in which hypertensive patients
were evaluated with 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), showed a marked BP reduction
particularly during nighttime sleep, thereby reducing the prevalence of non-dippers. The
authors concluded that the effects on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality seen with
ramipril in the HOPE study may relate to its improved effect (i. e., increase in the
diurnal/nocturnal BP ratio) on the non-dipping BP patterns.
In keeping with the documented administration-time dependent effects on BP regulation of
other ACEI, this prospective chronotherapy trial will investigate the potential differing
efficacy of ramipril in doses from 5 to 10 mg/day when administered, as a monotherapy either
upon awakening from nighttime sleep or at bedtime, to diurnally active patients with grade 1
or 2 essential hypertension, who will be evaluated by 48-hour ABPM before and after
pharmacologic intervention. The benefits from this trial may be extremely important, taking
into account 1) the high prevalence of non-dipping among patients with essential
hypertension, 2) the need for a proper 24-hour BP control with particular emphasis on the
regulation of nighttime resting BP mean, and 3) the lacking information on the
administration-time dependent effects on BP of ramipril, a widely used ACEI in doses of 5-10
mg/day.
Eligibility
Minimum age: 18 Years.
Maximum age: N/A.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Essential hypertension
Exclusion Criteria:
- Severe hypertension.
- Secondary hypertension.
- Grade III/IV hypertensive retinopathy.
- Type 1 diabetes.
- Cerebrovascular or cardiovascular event during the last 12 months prior to inclusion.
- Pregnant or lactating females.
- History of malignancy within the past five years.
- Shift workers.
- Obstructive sleep apnea.
- Use of disallowed concomitant medication.
- Intolerant to ABPM.
Locations and Contacts
Ramon C Hermida, PhD, Phone: 34986812148, Email: rhermida@uvigo.es
Unidad Compatida de Investigacion Hygia, Vigo, Pontevedra 36200, Spain; Recruiting Ramon C Hermida Domínguez, Ph.D., Phone: 34986812148, Email: rhermida@uvigo.es Ramon C Hermida Domínguez, Ph.D., Principal Investigator Diana E Ayala, PhD, Sub-Investigator Maria J Fontao, Sub-Investigator José R Fernández, PhD, Sub-Investigator Artemio Mojón, PhD, Sub-Investigator Ignacio Alonso, Sub-Investigator Luisa Chayán, MD, Sub-Investigator Juan Crespo, MD, Sub-Investigator Maria T Rios, MD, Sub-Investigator Manuel Dominguez, MD, PhD, Sub-Investigator Felisa Dominguez, MD, Sub-Investigator Jose L Salgado, MD, Sub-Investigator Francisco J Iglesias, MD, Sub-Investigator Susana Serrano, Sub-Investigator
Additional Information
Starting date: March 2007
Ending date: October 2009
Last updated: January 2, 2009
|