Spironolactone and amiloride were evaluated for blood pressure responses, endocrine, and haemodynamic changes in patients with resistant hypertension.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
SummaryBackgroundIn the PATHWAY-2 study of resistant hypertension, spironolactone reduced blood pressure substantially more than conventional antihypertensive drugs. We did three substudies to assess the mechanisms underlying this superiority and the pathogenesis of resistant hypertension.MethodsPATHWAY-2 was a randomised, double-blind crossover trial done at 14 UK primary and secondary care sites in 314 patients with resistant hypertension. Patients were given 12 weeks of once daily treatment with each of placebo, spironolactone 25–50 mg, bisoprolol 5–10 mg, and doxazosin 4–8 mg and the change in home systolic blood pressure was assessed as the primary outcome. In our three substudies, we assessed plasma aldosterone, renin, and aldosterone-to-renin ratio (ARR) as predictors of home systolic blood pressure, and estimated prevalence of primary aldosteronism (substudy 1); assessed the effects of each drug in terms of thoracic fluid index, cardiac index, stroke index, and systemic vascular resistance at seven sites with haemodynamic monitoring facilities (substudy 2); and assessed the effect of amiloride 10–20 mg once daily on clinic systolic blood pressure during an optional 6–12 week open-label runout phase (substudy 3). The PATHWAY-2 trial is registered with EudraCT, number 2008–007149–30, and ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02369081.FindingsOf the 314 patients in PATHWAY-2, 269 participated in one or more of the three substudies: 126 in substudy 1, 226 in substudy 2, and 146 in substudy 3. Home systolic blood pressure reduction by spironolactone was predicted by ARR (r2=0·13, pr2=0·11, p=0·00024). 42 patients had low renin concentrations (predefined as the lowest tertile of plasma renin), of which 31 had a plasma aldosterone concentration greater than the mean value for all 126 patients (250 pmol/L). Thus, 31 (25% 95% CI 17–33) of 126 patients were deemed to have inappropriately high aldosterone concentrations. Thoracic fluid content was reduced by 6·8% from baseline (95% CI 4·0 to 8·8; pInterpretationOur results suggest that resistant hypertension is commonly a salt-retaining state, most likely due to inappropriate aldosterone secretion. Mineralocorticoid receptor blockade by spironolactone overcomes the salt retention and resistance of hypertension to treatment. Amiloride seems to be as effective an antihypertensive as spironolactone, offering a substitute treatment for resistant hypertension.FundingBritish Heart Foundation and UK National Institute for Health Research.
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Bryan Williams
Brigham Young University
Thomas M. MacDonald
Public Safety Canada
S. V. Morant
University of Dundee
ENLIGHTEN (Jurnal Bimbingan dan Konseling Islam)
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology
University College London
Imperial College London
University of Edinburgh
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Williams et al. (Wed,) reported a other. Spironolactone and amiloride were evaluated for blood pressure responses, endocrine, and haemodynamic changes in patients with resistant hypertension.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c6c2b079266576f57044b6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/s2213-8587(18)30071-8