Triple Combination Antihypertensive Therapy VS Usual Care and Time at Maintaining Target Blood Pressure

JAMA Cardiology: Published on April, 2022

TAKE-HOME MESSAGE

Question:  Is low-dose triple combination antihypertensive therapy associated with greater time at target blood pressure compared with usual care?

Findings:  This secondary analysis of an open-label randomized controlled clinical trial evaluated whether low-dose triple combination antihypertensive therapy helps patients with mild to moderate hypertension to stay at target blood pressure longer than usual care.

The triple therapy combination pill contained telmisartan 20 mg, amlodipine 2.5 mg, and chlorthalidone 12.5 mg. Patients in the triple therapy group had a longer time at target blood pressure than those in the usual care group (64% vs 43%). This held true at all follow-up periods.

Meaning:  Triple combination antihypertensive therapy may be an effective way to control hypertension over time, and this study introduces time at target blood pressure as a novel trial outcome.


Doctors Liked to Read More

IMPORTANCE

Cumulative exposure to high blood pressure (BP) is an adverse prognostic marker. Assessments of BP control over time, such as time at target, have been developed but assessments of the effects of BP-lowering interventions on such measures are lacking.

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate whether low-dose triple combination antihypertensive therapy was associated with greater rates of time at target compared with usual care.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS

The Triple Pill vs Usual Care Management for Patients With Mild-to-Moderate Hypertension (TRIUMPH) trial was a open-label randomized clinical trial of low-dose triple BP therapy vs usual care conducted in urban hospital clinics in Sri Lanka from February 2016 to May 2017. Adults with hypertension (systolic BP >140 mm Hg and/or diastolic BP >90 mm Hg or in patients with diabetes or chronic kidney disease, systolic BP >130 mm Hg and/or diastolic BP >80 mm Hg) requiring initiation (untreated patients) or escalation (patients receiving monotherapy) of antihypertensive therapy were included. Patients were excluded if they were currently taking 2 or more blood pressure-lowering drugs or had severe or uncontrolled blood pressure, accelerated hypertension or physician-determined need for slower titration of treatment, a contraindication to the triple combination pill therapy, an unstable medical condition, or clinically significant laboratory values deemed by researchers to be unsuitable for the study. All 700 individuals in the original trial were included in the secondary analysis. This post hoc analysis was conducted from December 2020 to December 2021.

INTERVENTION

Once-daily fixed-dose triple combination pill (telmisartan 20 mg, amlodipine 2.5 mg, and chlorthalidone 12.5 mg) therapy vs usual care.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES

Between-group differences in time at target were compared over 24 weeks of follow-up, with time at target defined as percentage of time at target BP.

RESULTS

There were a total of 700 randomized patients (mean [SD] age, 56 [11] years; 403 [57.6%] women). Patients allocated to the triple pill group (n = 349) had higher time at target compared with those in the usual care group (n = 351) over 24 weeks' follow-up (64% vs 43%). Almost twice as many patients receiving triple pill therapy achieved more than 50% time at target during follow-up (64% vs 37%). The association of the triple pill with an increase in time at target was seen early, with most patients achieving more than 50% time at target by 12 weeks. Those receiving the triple pill achieved a consistently higher time at target at all follow-up periods compared with those receiving usual care (mean [SD]: 0-6 weeks, 36.3% [30.9%] vs 21.7% [28.9%]; 6-12 weeks, 5.2% [31.9%] vs 33.7% [33.0%]; 12-24 weeks, 66.0% [31.1%] vs 43.5% [34.3%]).

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE

To our knowledge, this analysis provides the first estimate of time at target as an outcome assessing longitudinal BP control in a randomized clinical trial. Among patients with mild to moderate hypertension, treatment with a low-dose triple combination pill was associated with substantially higher time at target compared with usual care.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35416909/
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamacardiology/article-abstract/2790740
This is for informational purposes only. You should consult your clinical textbook for advising your patients.