Angiotensin receptor blockers provide comparable blood pressure lowering to ACE inhibitors but with better tolerability and protective cardiovascular and renal effects in hypertensive patients.
Do angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) reduce blood pressure and prevent cardiovascular and renal damage in hypertensive patients compared to other antihypertensive agents?
This review highlights that ARBs are an excellent, well-tolerated first-line strategy for hypertension management, offering comparable blood pressure lowering to ACEi with added cardiovascular and renal protection.
Hypertension represents a major common cardiovascular risk factor. Optimal control of high blood pressure levels is recommended to reduce the global burden of hypertensive-mediated organ damage and cardiovascular (CV) events. Among the first-line drugs recommended in international guidelines, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system antagonists angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) have long represented a rational, effective, and safe anti-hypertensive pharmacological strategy. In fact, current US and European guidelines recommend ACEi and ARBs as a suitable first choice for hypertension treatment together with calcium channel blockers (CCBs) and thiazide diuretics. Different studies have demonstrated that ARBs and ACEi exert a comparable effect in lowering blood pressure levels. However, ARBs are characterized by better pharmacological tolerability. Most importantly, the clinical evidence supports a relevant protective role of ARBs toward the CV and renal damage development, as well as the occurrence of major adverse CV events, in hypertensive patients. Moreover, a neutral metabolic effect has been reported upon ARBs administration, in contrast to other antihypertensive agents, such as beta-blockers and diuretics. These properties highlight the use of ARBs as an excellent pharmacological strategy to manage hypertension and its dangerous consequences. The present review article summarizes the available evidence regarding the beneficial effects and current recommendations of ARBs in hypertension. The specific properties performed by these agents in various clinical subsets are discussed, also including an overview of their implications for the current COVID-19 pandemic.
Gallo et al. (Fri,) conducted a review in Hypertension. Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARBs) vs. ACE inhibitors (ACEi) was evaluated. Angiotensin receptor blockers provide comparable blood pressure lowering to ACE inhibitors but with better tolerability and protective cardiovascular and renal effects in hypertensive patients.