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Expensive
new Blood Pressure Meds no better than
Generics
Newswise,
August 2010 — Expensive brand-name
medications to lower blood pressure are no
better at preventing cardiovascular disease
than older, generic diuretics, according to
new long-term data from a landmark study.
Paul Whelton, MB, MD, MSc, reported the
results on Aug. 13 at the plenary session of
the China Heart Congress and International
Heart Forum in Beijing. Whelton is president
and CEO of Loyola University Health System
and chairman of the Antihypertensive and
Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heat
Attack Trial (ALLHAT), which has examined
the comparative value of different blood
pressure-lowering medications.
More than 33,000 patients with high blood
pressure were randomly assigned to take
either a diuretic (chlorthalidone) or one of
two newer drugs, a calcium channel blocker (amlodipine)
or an ACE inhibitor (lisinopril).
In 2002, ALLHAT researchers reported that
among patients followed for four-to-eight
years, the diuretic was better than the
calcium channel blocker in preventing heart
failure and better than the ACE inhibitor in
preventing stroke, heart failure and overall
cardiovascular disease.
In the new study, researchers followed
ALLHAT participants for an additional four
to five years after completion of the trial,
bringing the total follow-up period to
between eight and 13 years. During this
longer follow-up period, the differences
between the three drugs narrowed -- by most
measures they were a statistical dead heat.
But the diuretic still was superior in two
measures: Compared with the diuretic group,
the ACE inhibitor group had a 20 percent
higher death rate from stroke, and the
calcium channel blocker group had a 12
percent higher rate of hospitalizations and
deaths due to heart failure.
Diuretics, sometimes called "water pills,"
are the traditional medications for high
blood pressure. They cause kidneys to remove
sodium and water from the body, thereby
relaxing blood vessel walls. ACE inhibitors
such as lisinopril (brand names, Prinivil®
and Zestril®) decrease chemicals that
tighten blood vessels. Calcium channel
blockers such as amlodipine (brand name,
Norvasc®) relax blood vessels.
Diuretics cost $25 to $40 per year, while
newer brand-name hypertension drugs can cost
$300 to $600 per year.
The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
recommends patients control their blood
pressure by first controlling their weight,
exercising, reducing sodium, increasing
potassium and drinking alcohol in
moderation. The institute says that if
lifestyle changes are not sufficient,
diuretics then normally should be the drug
of first choice.
However, newer, higher-priced drugs are
heavily marketed, and diuretics account for
only about 30 percent of prescriptions
written for high blood pressure medications,
Whelton said.
Whelton is senior author of a study
published in the May 24, 2010, Archives of
Internal Medicine that found that using
techniques similar to those employed by
pharmaceutical sales reps can help persuade
doctors to prescribe diuretics.
Like drug sales representatives, researchers
in the study met with small groups of
doctors, especially opinion leaders. They
detailed guidelines for treating high blood
pressure, and handed out studies,
newsletters, exam room posters, etc. An
examination of prescribing patterns found
that this technique, known as "academic
detailing," influenced what drugs doctors
prescribed.
ALLHAT is sponsored by the National Heart,
Lung and Blood Institute. "We are continuing
to mine data that we collected during the
trial," Whelton said.