Head-to-head comparisons of blood pressure-lowering drug classes in 247,006 patients showed no significant differences on most cardiovascular outcomes when blood pressure reduction was equivalent.
Meta-Analysis (n=247,006)
Do different classes of blood pressure-lowering drugs have different effects on cardiovascular outcomes in patients with hypertension?
While blood pressure-lowering drug classes have similar effects on most outcomes when BP reduction is equivalent, specific classes offer distinct advantages for certain outcomes like heart failure or stroke.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: We have recently published an overview and meta-analysis of the effects of the five major classes of blood pressure-lowering drugs on cardiovascular outcomes when compared with placebo. However, possible differences in effectiveness of the various classes can correctly be estimated only by head-to-head comparisons of different classes of agents. This has been the objective of a new survey and meta-analysis. METHODS: A database search between 1966 and August 2014 ide ntified 50 eligible randomized controlled trials for 58 two-drug comparisons (247 006 patients for 1 029 768 patient-years). Risk ratios and their 95% confidence intervals of seven outcomes were estimated by a random-effects model. RESULTS: The effects of all drug classes are not significantly different on most outcomes when their blood pressure effect is equivalent. However, there are also significant differences involving almost all classes of drugs. When compared to all other classes together, diuretics are superior in preventing heart failure; beta-blockers less effective in preventing stroke; calcium antagonists superior in preventing stroke and all-cause death, but inferior in preventing heart failure; angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors more effective in preventing coronary heart disease and less in preventing stroke; angiotensin receptor blockers inferior in preventing coronary heart disease; and renin-angiotensin system blockers more effective in preventing heart failure. When stratifying randomized controlled trials according to total cardiovascular risk, no drug class was found to change in effectiveness with the level of risk. CONCLUSIONS: The results of all available evidence from head-to-head drug class comparisons do not allow the formulation of a fixed paradigm of drug choice valuable for all hypertensive patients, but the differences found may suggest specific choices in specific conditions, or preferable combinations of drugs.
Thomopoulos et al. (Thu,) conducted a meta-analysis in Hypertension (n=247,006). Blood pressure-lowering drug classes vs. Other blood pressure-lowering drug classes was evaluated on Seven cardiovascular outcomes (including stroke, heart failure, coronary heart disease, and all-cause death). Head-to-head comparisons of blood pressure-lowering drug classes in 247,006 patients showed no significant differences on most cardiovascular outcomes when blood pressure reduction was equivalent.