Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
BACKGROUND: Low-dose combinations are a promising intervention for improving blood pressure (BP) control but their effects on therapeutic inertia are uncertain. METHODS: Analysis of 591 patients randomized to an ultra-low-dose quadruple pill or initial monotherapy. The episode of therapeutic inertia was defined as a patient visit with a BP of >140/90 mm Hg without intensification of antihypertensive treatment. We compared the frequency of therapeutic inertia episodes between Quadpill and initial monotherapy as a proportion of the total population (intention-to-treat analysis with the denominator being all participants randomized) and as a proportion of people with uncontrolled BP (with the denominator being participants with uncontrolled BP). RESULTS: Therapeutic inertia occurred in fewer participants randomized to Quadpill compared with monotherapy. For example, among the 390 participants with a 6-month follow-up, therapeutic inertia according to unattended BP was 21/192 (11%) versus 45/192 (23%), P =0.002. There were similar rates of therapeutic inertia among those with uncontrolled unattended BP in each group (all P >0.4). Consistent observations were seen with the use of attended office BP measures. The major determinants of not intensifying treatment during follow-up were BP readings that were close to target and large improvements in BP compared with the previous visit. CONCLUSIONS: Among all treated individuals, low-dose Quadpill reduced the number of therapeutic inertia episodes compared with initial monotherapy. After the first follow-up visit, most high BP values did not lead to treatment intensification in both groups. Education is needed about the importance of treatment intensification despite a significant improvement in BP or BP being close to target. REGISTRATION: URL: XXX; Unique identifier: ACTRN12616001144404
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Nelson Wang
Heart Failure & Transplant
Amy Von Huben
The University of Sydney
Simone Marschner
Preventive Cardiology
Hypertension
The University of Sydney
UNSW Sydney
The University of Western Australia
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Wang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e7433fb6db6435876bc37c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/hypertensionaha.123.22284
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: