Nifedipine plus diltiazem lowered mean supine diastolic pressure at 8 hours significantly more than nifedipine plus verapamil (77.6 vs 84.6 mm Hg, P=.001) due to a pharmacokinetic interaction.
RCT (n=16)
Double-blind
Crossover
Does adding diltiazem or verapamil to nifedipine improve blood pressure reduction in patients with essential hypertension?
Combining nifedipine with diltiazem results in greater antihypertensive effects and higher nifedipine plasma concentrations compared to combining it with verapamil, suggesting a pharmacokinetic interaction.
Absolute Event Rate: 77.6% vs 84.6%
p-value: p=.001
Receptor binding studies suggest that combinations of calcium channel blockers may result in either enhanced or diminished pharmacological effects, but clinical data in hypertension are incomplete. In this study, we compared blood pressure reductions using nifedipine alone, nifedipine plus diltiazem, and nifedipine plus verapamil and determined whether combinations alter nifedipine pharmacokinetics. After determination of baseline blood pressures. 16 subjects with essential hypertension (12 men, 4 women; mean age, 48 years) received 30 mg/d open-label, sustained release nifedipine for 2 weeks. If still hypertensive (n = 16), they were randomized (double-blind) to receive either additional sustained release diltiazem or sustained release verapamil, both 180 mg/d, for 2 weeks and were then crossed-over for the final 2 weeks of the study. All medications were once-daily, extended-release formulations. Blood pressures and nifedipine plasma concentrations were measured during the final day of each treatment. Overall, each combination lowered mean systolic and diastolic pressures more than nifedipine alone. Mean supine diastolic pressures were significantly lower at 8 hours (77.6 versus 84.6 mm Hg, P = .001) and 12 hours (81.5 versus 87.1 mm Hg, P = .04) with nifedipine plus diltiazem than nifedipine plus verapamil. Mean nifedipine concentrations were inversely correlated with mean blood pressures. Mean nifedipine area under the curve values were greater with diltiazem than verapamil (1430 versus 1134 ng.h/mL, P = .026), with each greater than nifedipine alone (957 ng.h/mL). Nifedipine plus diltiazem had a greater antihypertensive effect than nifedipine plus verapamil. Diltiazem caused greater increases in nifedipine plasma concentrations than did verapamil. These data suggest that combined calcium channel blockers result in additive antihypertensive effects, perhaps because of a pharmacokinetic interaction.
Saseen et al. (Mon,) conducted a rct in Essential hypertension (n=16). Nifedipine plus diltiazem vs. Nifedipine plus verapamil (180 mg/d) and nifedipine alone was evaluated on Mean supine diastolic pressure at 8 hours (p=.001). Nifedipine plus diltiazem lowered mean supine diastolic pressure at 8 hours significantly more than nifedipine plus verapamil (77.6 vs 84.6 mm Hg, P=.001) due to a pharmacokinetic interaction.