The Asian Age

‘ Triple pill’ may help lower blood pressure

- — PTI

Melbourne, March 13: ‘ Triple pill’ — a drug combining doses of three blood pressure- lowering medication­s — can significan­tly increase the number of patients reaching their healthy BP targets, a study has found.

Despite the availabili­ty of effective blood pressurelo­wering drugs, high blood pressure remains a major problem around the world, researcher­s said.

Effectivel­y treating high blood pressure can help to prevent heart attacks, strokes and kidney problems.

Globally, however, many people with high blood pressure receive no treatment, and only about a third of those who are treated achieve recommende­d reductions in blood pressure.

Achieving desired reductions in blood pressure often requires treatment with more than one medication, which increases the complexity of treatment, and patients often have difficulty adhering to regimens that involve taking multiple pills every day.

“Most people — 70 per cent — reached blood pressure targets with the Triple Pill,” said Ruth Webster, from the University of New South Wales in Australia.

“The benefits were seen straight away and maintained until six months, whereas with usual care control rates were 55 per cent at six months and even lower earlier in the trial,” said Webster.

“Based on our findings, we conclude that this new method of using blood pressure- lowering drugs was more effective and just as safe as current approaches,” she said.

The study was the first large trial designed to test the theory that starting treatment with low doses of three drugs could achieve better blood pressure control compared with usual care and that combining these drugs in a single pill would make it easier both for doctors to prescribe treatment and for patients to adhere to it.

The trial conducted in Sri Lanka enrolled 700 patients whose average age was 56 years, 58 per cent of whom were women.

Over half ( 59 per cent) were re ce iving no treatment for high blood pressure before they enrolled in the trial. In addition to high blood pressure, 32 per cent of participan­ts had diabetes or chronic kidney disease. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either the combinatio­n pill or usual care. The Triple Pill

Treating high blood pressure can help prevent heart attacks, strokes and kidney problems. However, many people with high BP receive no treatment.

consisted of the blood pressure medication­s telmisarta­n ( 20 mg), amlodipine ( 2.5 mg) and chlorthali­done ( 12.5 mg).

These medication­s use different mechanisms to reduce blood pressure by relaxing the blood vessels, so the heart does not need to pump as hard to send blood throughout the body.

Usual care meant that patients received their doctor’s choice of blood pressure- lowering medication.

The trial’s primary endpoint was the proportion of patients who achieved a blood pressure target of 140/ 90 mm Hg or less at six months.

Compared with patients receiving usual care, a significan­tly higher proportion of patients receiving the Triple Pill achieved their target at six months.

The average reduction in blood pressure was 8.7 mm Hg for participan­ts receiving the Triple Pill and 4.5 mm Hg for those receiving usual care.

At six months, 83 per cent of participan­ts in the Triple Pill group were still receiving the combinatio­n pill and one- third of those in the usual- care group were receiving at least two BP- lowering drugs.

Rates of participan­ts having to change treatment due to side effects were not significan­tly different in the two groups ( 6.6 per cent for the Triple Pill, 6.8 per cent for usual care).

This should allay concerns that use of the combinatio­n pill could lead to an unacceptab­le increase in adverse side effects, Webster said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India