Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Nov 2017)

Combination Therapy Is Superior to Sequential Monotherapy for the Initial Treatment of Hypertension: A Double‐Blind Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Thomas M. MacDonald,
  • Bryan Williams,
  • David J. Webb,
  • Steve Morant,
  • Mark Caulfield,
  • J. Kennedy Cruickshank,
  • Ian Ford,
  • Peter Sever,
  • Isla S. Mackenzie,
  • Sandosh Padmanabhan,
  • Gerald P. McCann,
  • Jackie Salsbury,
  • Gordon McInnes,
  • Morris J. Brown

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.117.006986
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 11

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundGuidelines for hypertension vary in their preference for initial combination therapy or initial monotherapy, stratified by patient profile; therefore, we compared the efficacy and tolerability of these approaches. Methods and ResultsWe performed a 1‐year, double‐blind, randomized controlled trial in 605 untreated patients aged 18 to 79 years with systolic blood pressure (BP) ≥150 mm Hg or diastolic BP ≥95 mm Hg. In phase 1 (weeks 0–16), patients were randomly assigned to initial monotherapy (losartan 50–100 mg or hydrochlorothiazide 12.5–25 mg crossing over at 8 weeks), or initial combination (losartan 50–100 mg plus hydrochlorothiazide 12.5–25 mg). In phase 2 (weeks 17–32), all patients received losartan 100 mg and hydrochlorothiazide 12.5 to 25 mg. In phase 3 (weeks 33–52), amlodipine with or without doxazosin could be added to achieve target BP. Hierarchical primary outcomes were the difference from baseline in home systolic BP, averaged over phases 1 and 2 and, if significant, at 32 weeks. Secondary outcomes included adverse events, and difference in home systolic BP responses between tertiles of plasma renin. Home systolic BP after initial monotherapy fell 4.9 mm Hg (range: 3.7–6.0 mm Hg) less over 32 weeks (P150/95 mm Hg. Clinical Trial RegistrationURL: http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00994617.

Keywords