1. Blood pressure control by the nifedipine GITS-telmisartan combination in patients at high cardiovascular risk: the TALENT study
- Author
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Mancia, G, Parati, G, Bilo, G, Cohi, J, Ochan Kilama, M, Ruilope, L, Ruilope, LM, Mancia, G, Parati, G, Bilo, G, Cohi, J, Ochan Kilama, M, Ruilope, L, and Ruilope, LM
- Abstract
Background: Guidelines on hypertension regard combinations between two antihypertensive drugs to be the most important treatment strategy. Because of the complementary mechanism of action and the evidence of cardiovascular protective effects they include the combination of a calcium antagonist and an angiotensin receptor antagonist among the priorital ones to employ. Aims: To determine in hypertensive patients at high cardiovascular risk whether combining Nifedipine GITS at low dose and telmisartan reduced ambulatory and clinic blood pressure (BP) more than the combination components, controlled BP early after treatment initiation and allowed to also obtain a better long-term BP control compared to initiating treatment with the combination components and moving to the combination later. Methods: Four hundred and five patients with a clinic SBP 135 mmHg and with diabetes, a metabolic syndrome or organ damage were randomized to once-a-day telmisartan 80 mg, nifedipine GITS 20 mg or the combination of the two drugs in a 1: 1: 2 ratio for 8 weeks in the context of a multicenter double-blind study design. Patients on monotherapy were then moved to combination treatment and all three groups were followed for an additional 16-week period. Both 24-h and clinic BP were measured before treatment and at various times during treatment. Results: In the per-protocol patients (n = 327), baseline demographic and clinical characteristics were similar between the three groups. Baseline 24-h SBP values were 136.2 ± 11.6 mmHg (mean ± SD), 137.2 ± 12.5 mmHg and 136.8 ± 11.7 mmHg in the telmisartan monotherapy, nifedipine GITS monotherapy and combination therapy, respectively. The corresponding clinic values were 151.7 ± 11.8, 151.3 ± 11.9 and 151.1 ± 11.8 mmHg, respectively. All treatments lowered 24-h SBP significantly (P < 0.0001) but combination treatment (8 weeks) reduced it significantly more than monotherapies (10.8 ± 0.8 vs. 6.6 ± 1.1 mmHg and 8.0 ± 1.2 mmHg; P = 0.001 and 0.0
- Published
- 2011