TIME: Evening dosing of BP medication ‘no better or worse’ than morning dosing


Patients taking antihypertensive medication in the evening experienced no difference in MI, stroke or CV death occurrence compared with patients taking them in the morning, a speaker reported.

The results of the TIME study were presented at the European Society of Cardiology Congress.

Woman taking sleeping pill
Source: Adobe Stock

Taking prescribed blood pressure tablets in the evening was no better or worse than taking them in the morning for the prevention of cardiovascular disease,” Tom MacDonald, MD, clinical professor of molecular and clinical medicine at the University of Dundee, in Dundee, U.K., said during a presentation. “Taking medication in the evening wasn’t harmful, as far as we could detect, and we conclude patients can take their blood pressure medication in either the morning or the evening, as the timing makes no difference to cardiovascular outcomes.”

MacDonald and colleagues conducted a large, randomized study of 21,104 individuals in the U.K. National Health Service hospital databases treated for high BP. The primary outcome was independently verified MI, stroke and CV death. Patients were followed for a median of 5 years.

The researchers observed no difference in the primary outcome of MI, stroke or vascular death among patients who took their antihypertensive medication at night compared with those taking medication in the morning (HR = 0.95; 95% CI, 0.83-1.1; P = .53).

Moreover, they observed no safety risk for taking BP medication at night compared with in the morning with respect to other outcomes of interest including nonfatal stroke (HR = 0.93; 95% CI, 0.73-1.18; P = .54), nonfatal MI (HR = 0.92; 95% CI, 0.73-1.16; P = .48) and CV death individually (HR = 1.1; 95% CI, 0.84-1.43; P = .49), as well as all-cause death (HR = 1.04; 95% CI, 0.91-1.18; P = .59) and HF hospitalization or death (HR = 0.79; 95% CI, 0.59-1.07; P = .12).

“The key message for this study is that taking your tablets for your high blood pressure in the evening wasn’t different at all from taking them in the morning for preventing heart attacks, strokes or cardiovascular deaths,” MacDonald said during the presentation. “We didn’t find that evening dosing was at all harmful in terms of falls. Patients can take their tablets whenever it’s convenient.”

Perspective

Back to Top Steven E. Nissen, MD, MACC)

Steven E. Nissen, MD, MACC

This study is kind of underwhelming. Most of the drug we use are relatively long acting. When in the day you give a diuretic, long-acting ACE inhibitor, etc, is not likely to make a difference.

Obviously, somebody went through a lot of trouble to try to find out whether it made a difference, and it didn’t. This is not a result that I would consider to be unexpected. There really isn’t any difference. You can give BP medicines whenever you want and that’s what I’ve always told patients. When it’s convenient, take it. The most important thing is to take your medicine.

Lisinopril, which is the ACE inhibitor we most commonly use, has an 18-hour half-life. In cases like that, it doesn’t matter when you give the drug.

This is not something that I would have wanted to spend a lot of resources trying to figure out.

Steven E. Nissen, MD, MACC

Cardiology Today Editorial Board Member

Cleveland Clinic

Some Antihypertensives Linked to Breast Cancer Risk.


 The first observational study of long-term antihypertensive use and breast cancer risk has found that calcium-channel blockers are associated with a more than 2-fold increased risk and that angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors are associated with a reduced risk.

These findings come from a study published online August 5 inJAMA Internal Medicine.

Women who had taken calcium-channel blockers for 10 years or more had more than double the usual risk for invasive ductal breast carcinoma (IDC) (odds ratio [OR], 2.4) and for invasive lobular breast carcinoma (ILC) (OR, 2.6). The researchers also observed a possible association between the long-term use of ACE inhibitors and reduced risks for both IDC (OR, 0.7) and ILC (OR, 0.6), although the risk estimate for IDC was within the limits of chance.

No Changes in Clinical Practice Recommended Yet

“We don’t think this should change clinical practice in any way. It was the first study of long-term antihypertensive use. It was an observational study, not a clinical trial. We can suggest an association, but we cannot infer any causal relation at this point,” lead author Christopher Li, MD, PhD, from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, told Medscape Medical News.

Dr. Li and colleagues interviewed women 55 to 74 years of age from the Puget Sound region — 880 with IDC, 1027 with ILC, and 856 without cancer (control group). Participants were interviewed in person to establish detailed histories of hypertension and heart disease and risk factors for cancer, including family history, obesity, smoking, and alcohol use. The researchers gathered data on the use of antihypertensive drugs, including beginning and end dates of use, drug names, dose, route of administration, pattern of use, and indication.

The antihypertensives included ACE inhibitors, angiotensin-receptor blockers, beta blockers, calcium-channel blockers, diuretics, and combination antihypertensive preparations, regardless of indication.

Calcium-channel blockers are among the most frequently prescribed medications in the United States; they accounted for nearly 98 million of the more than 678 million prescriptions filled in 2010.

Subjects who had used antihypertensives for 6 months or longer and were still using them were classified as current users, subjects who had used them for 6 months but were no longer using them were classified as former users, and subjects who had used them for less than 6 months were classified as short-term users.

In the regression analyses, potential confounders included age, county of residence, other commonly used medications, comorbid conditions (cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, depression), alcohol use, and estrogen-receptor status.

Increased Risk After 10 Years

“In examining duration effects for current users, we found an increased risk only in relation to the use of calcium-channel blockers for 10 years or longer, and an increased risk was observed for both IDC (OR, 2.4; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.2 – 4.9; P = .04 for trend) and ILC (OR, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.3 – 5.3; P = .01 for trend). This association with 10 years or longer of current calcium-channel blocker use did not vary appreciably when results were further stratified by estrogen-receptor status,” the researchers report.

Dr. Li told Medscape Medical News that they were surprised by the magnitude of the risk associated with calcium-channel blockers and by the decrease associated with ACE inhibitors.

“We expected that we might see some increase in breast cancer risk with calcium-channel blockers, but not a more than doubling of the risk,” Dr. Li said. “The suggestion of an association between ACE inhibitors and reduction in breast cancer risk was a very unexpected finding and is worthy of follow-up.”

The mechanism behind the apparent calcium-channel blocker effect is not known, Dr. Li explained, but some researchers suspect that these drugs might increase cancer risk by inhibiting apoptosis.

“First-Rate Study,” But Confirmation Needed

“The data are persuasive because this was a first-rate study: it was population-based, large (1900 case patients and 856 controls), identified cases from the Seattle-area SEER surveillance system, had a high (80%) case response rate, and used best practices in ascertaining medication use from study participants,” Patricia F. Coogan, ScD, from the Slone Epidemiology Center at Boston University, writes in a related commentary.

“Given these results, should the use of calcium-channel blockers be discontinued once a patient has taken them for 9.9 years? The answer is no, because these data are from an observational study, which cannot prove causality and by itself cannot make a case for change in clinical practice,” Dr. Coogan explains.

“If the 2- to 3-fold increase in risk found in this study is confirmed, long-term calcium-channel blocker use would take its place as one of the major modifiable risk factors for breast cancer. Thus it is important that efforts be made to replicate the findings,” Dr. Coogan notes.

“We are cautious and don’t want to read too much into this, since this was the first study to look at long-term use of these medications. We need to see confirmation of the study before making any clinical recommendations,” Dr. Li emphasized.

Source: Medscape.com

Effect on blood pressure of combined inhibition of endothelin-converting enzyme and neutral endopeptidase with daglutril in patients with type 2 diabetes who have albuminuria: a randomised, crossover, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.


Background

Effective reduction of albuminuria and blood pressure in patients with type 2 diabetes who have nephropathy is seldom achieved with available treatments. We tested the effects of treatment of such patients with daglutril, a combined endothelin-converting enzyme and neutral endopeptidase inhibitor.

Methods

We did this randomised, crossover trial in two hospitals in Italy. Eligibility criteria were: age 18 years or older, urinary albumin excretion 20—999 μg/min, systolic blood pressure (BP) less than 140 mm Hg, and diastolic BP less than 90 mm Hg. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) with a computer-generated randomised sequence to receive either daglutril (300 mg/day) then placebo for 8 weeks each or vice versa, with a 4-week washout period. Patients also took losartan throughout. Participants and investigators were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was 24-h urinary albumin excretion in the intention-to-treat population. Secondary endpoints were median office and ambulatory (24 h, daytime, and night-time) BP, renal haemodynamics and sieving function, and metabolic and laboratory test results. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00160225.

Findings

We screened 58 patients, of whom 45 were enrolled (22 assigned to daglutril then placebo, 23 to placebo then daglutril; enrolment from May, 2005, to December, 2006) and 42 (20 vs 22) were included in the primary analysis. Daglutril did not significantly affect 24-h urinary albumin excretion compared with placebo (difference in change −7·6 μg/min, IQR −78·7 to 19·0; p=0·559). 34 patients had complete 24-h BP readings; compared with placebo, daglutril significantly reduced 24-h systolic (difference −5·2 mm Hg, SD 9·4; p=0·0013), diastolic (—2·5, 6·2; p=0·015), pulse (—3·0, 6·3; p=0·019), and mean (—3·1, 6·2; p=0·003) BP, as well as all night-time BP readings and daytime systolic, pulse, and mean BP, but not diastolic BP. Compared with placebo, daglutril also significantly reduced office systolic BP (—5·4, 15·4; p=0·028), but not diastolic (—1·8, 9·9; p=0·245), pulse (—3·1, 10·6; p=0·210), or mean (—2·1, 10·4; p=0·205) BP, and increased big endothelin serum concentration. Other secondary outcomes did not differ significantly between treatment periods. Three patients taking placebo and six patients taking daglutril had mild treatment-related adverse events—the most common was facial or peripheral oedema (in four patients taking daglutril).

Interpretation

Daglutril improved control of BP in hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes and nephropathy and had an acceptable safety profile. Combined endothelin-converting enzyme and neutral endopeptidase inhibition could provide a new approach to hypertension in this high-risk population.

Discussion

8-week treatment with daglutril plus losartan and other antihypertensive drugs did not significantly affect urinary albumin excretion, nor renal haemodynamic measures or sieving function, but it did decrease ambulatory blood pressure in hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and albuminuria. Treatment was safe and well tolerated in all participants.

Because dietary salt intake and concomitant anti-hypertensive treatment were not systematically changed and 24-h urinary sodium excretion was stable during the study, we can reasonably exclude any confounding effect of intensified hypertension treatment or reduced sodium exposure. Moreover, we detected no substantial carry-over effect and the crossover design avoided confounding related to interpatient data heterogeneity. Thus, the reduction of blood pressure associated with daglutril seems to be a genuine treatment effect.

To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first randomised clinical trial reporting the beneficial effects of daglutril on arterial hypertension in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (panel). Hypertension affects most patients with diabetes and almost all of those with some renal involvement;13 systolic hypertension is almost always present. When combined with increased pulse pressure, it is almost always a result of increased vascular stiffness—a major risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in this population.19 Systolic hypertension is often resistant to drug treatment,19 especially in patients with diabetes with renal involvement; in our study, systolic blood pressure averaged 140 mm Hg, despite background treatment with losartan, plus two or more antihypertensive drugs, and also a diuretic in most cases. This blood pressure exceeds the 130 mm Hg target that was recommended when the study was designed, but accords with the most recent guidelines,20 which recommend less stringent control of blood pressure in patients with diabetes.

Source: Lancet

 

Effect on blood pressure of combined inhibition of endothelin-converting enzyme and neutral endopeptidase with daglutril in patients with type 2 diabetes who have albuminuria: a randomised, crossover, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.


Background

Effective reduction of albuminuria and blood pressure in patients with type 2 diabetes who have nephropathy is seldom achieved with available treatments. We tested the effects of treatment of such patients with daglutril, a combined endothelin-converting enzyme and neutral endopeptidase inhibitor.

Methods

We did this randomised, crossover trial in two hospitals in Italy. Eligibility criteria were: age 18 years or older, urinary albumin excretion 20—999 μg/min, systolic blood pressure (BP) less than 140 mm Hg, and diastolic BP less than 90 mm Hg. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) with a computer-generated randomised sequence to receive either daglutril (300 mg/day) then placebo for 8 weeks each or vice versa, with a 4-week washout period. Patients also took losartan throughout. Participants and investigators were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was 24-h urinary albumin excretion in the intention-to-treat population. Secondary endpoints were median office and ambulatory (24 h, daytime, and night-time) BP, renal haemodynamics and sieving function, and metabolic and laboratory test results. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00160225.

Findings

We screened 58 patients, of whom 45 were enrolled (22 assigned to daglutril then placebo, 23 to placebo then daglutril; enrolment from May, 2005, to December, 2006) and 42 (20 vs 22) were included in the primary analysis. Daglutril did not significantly affect 24-h urinary albumin excretion compared with placebo (difference in change −7·6 μg/min, IQR −78·7 to 19·0; p=0·559). 34 patients had complete 24-h BP readings; compared with placebo, daglutril significantly reduced 24-h systolic (difference −5·2 mm Hg, SD 9·4; p=0·0013), diastolic (—2·5, 6·2; p=0·015), pulse (—3·0, 6·3; p=0·019), and mean (—3·1, 6·2; p=0·003) BP, as well as all night-time BP readings and daytime systolic, pulse, and mean BP, but not diastolic BP. Compared with placebo, daglutril also significantly reduced office systolic BP (—5·4, 15·4; p=0·028), but not diastolic (—1·8, 9·9; p=0·245), pulse (—3·1, 10·6; p=0·210), or mean (—2·1, 10·4; p=0·205) BP, and increased big endothelin serum concentration. Other secondary outcomes did not differ significantly between treatment periods. Three patients taking placebo and six patients taking daglutril had mild treatment-related adverse events—the most common was facial or peripheral oedema (in four patients taking daglutril).

Interpretation

Daglutril improved control of BP in hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes and nephropathy and had an acceptable safety profile. Combined endothelin-converting enzyme and neutral endopeptidase inhibition could provide a new approach to hypertension in this high-risk population.

Discussion

8-week treatment with daglutril plus losartan and other antihypertensive drugs did not significantly affect urinary albumin excretion, nor renal haemodynamic measures or sieving function, but it did decrease ambulatory blood pressure in hypertensive patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and albuminuria. Treatment was safe and well tolerated in all participants.

Because dietary salt intake and concomitant anti-hypertensive treatment were not systematically changed and 24-h urinary sodium excretion was stable during the study, we can reasonably exclude any confounding effect of intensified hypertension treatment or reduced sodium exposure. Moreover, we detected no substantial carry-over effect and the crossover design avoided confounding related to interpatient data heterogeneity. Thus, the reduction of blood pressure associated with daglutril seems to be a genuine treatment effect.

To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first randomised clinical trial reporting the beneficial effects of daglutril on arterial hypertension in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (panel). Hypertension affects most patients with diabetes and almost all of those with some renal involvement;13 systolic hypertension is almost always present. When combined with increased pulse pressure, it is almost always a result of increased vascular stiffness—a major risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in this population.19 Systolic hypertension is often resistant to drug treatment,19 especially in patients with diabetes with renal involvement; in our study, systolic blood pressure averaged 140 mm Hg, despite background treatment with losartan, plus two or more antihypertensive drugs, and also a diuretic in most cases. This blood pressure exceeds the 130 mm Hg target that was recommended when the study was designed, but accords with the most recent guidelines,20 which recommend less stringent control of blood pressure in patients with diabetes.

Thus, daglutril effectively improved both office and ambulatory systolic hypertension with much smaller effects on diastolic blood pressure. Reduction in systolic blood pressure is normally associated with a concomitant reduction in diastolic blood pressure, which can result in decreased left ventricular perfusion and a heightened risk of cardiovascular events—the so called J curve.21 Therefore, availability of a drug that can reduce systolic and pulse pressure with marginal effects on diastolic blood pressure might have major clinical implications. Indeed, a 10 mm Hg reduction in systolic blood pressure has been associated with a 22% reduction in coronary heart disease and 41% reduction in stroke.22 Whether the effect of daglutril observed in our study is a result of improved vascular stiffness should be investigated. The treatment effect of daglutril on ambulatory blood pressure was larger during night-time, and was achieved on top of full-dose losartan plus two or more additional hypotensive drugs in most patients. This might also have clinical implications, because night-time hypertension is a strong cardiovascular risk factor independent of trough, 24-h, or daytime blood pressure control, especially in patients with diabetes who have renal disease.23

We recorded a significant increase in office blood pressure, and a non-significant increase in other blood pressures, during placebo treatment, which might be a result of progression of renal disease with a consequent worsening of hypertension. Daglutril maintained all measures of office blood pressure and decreased ambulatory systolic and pulse blood pressure, an effect that translated into net differences compared with placebo that were larger for ambulatory than for office blood pressure.

The increase in serum concentrations of big EDN1 suggests that the treatment effect was mainly sustained by inhibition of endothelin-converting enzyme. In the vasculature, EDNRA and EDNRB are expressed on vascular smooth-muscle cells and mediate the vasoconstrictory effects of EDN1. ENDRB is also located on vascular endothelial cells, where its activation promotes vasodilation through release of nitric oxide and prostacyclin.10 In patients with mild-to-moderate hypertension without antihypertensive treatment, the mixed endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan has been reported to significantly reduce office and 24-h systolic and diastolic blood pressure compared with placebo, and to a similar extent as the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, enalapril.24 Furthermore, the selective EDNRA antagonist darusentan—when added to at least three other antihypertensive drugs—significantly reduced office and 24-h systolic and diastolic blood pressure in patients with treatment-resistant hypertension, and to a larger extent than had been shown for bosentan.25 Finally, avosentan—an EDNRA antagonist that is less selective than darusentan—improved albuminuria when given with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin 2 receptor blockers in patients with overt diabetic nephropathy, but had no antihypertensive effect.26 Theoretically, avoiding inhibition of EDNRB would be preferable, because it also mediates the clearance of circulating EDN1 in people, and in animal studies it has a role in regulation of natriuresis and diuresis. Thus, endothelin-converting enzyme inhibitors are promising new drugs—they will antagonise endothelin without affecting EDNRB-mediated clearance of EDN1.10

Blood pressure reduction during daglutril treatment was not associated with any significant change in 24-h albuminuria, renal haemodynamics, or albumin and IgG fractional clearances compared with placebo. One explanation could be that patients had increased bioavailability of pro-atrial natriuretic peptide secondary to inhibition of neutral endopeptidase, which could have increased glomerular permeability to plasma macromolecules.27 The consequent increase in albumin ultrafiltration might have offset the reduction in albuminuria expected from decreased kidney perfusion pressure and postglomerular vasodilatation from antagonism of endothelin.2829 Natriuretic peptides might also induce preglomerular vasodilatation that maintains glomerular perfusion and filtration despite reduced blood pressure.30 This hypothesis might explain why glomerular filtration rate and renal plasma flow were not reduced by daglutril treatment.

Our safety data compare favourably to the side-effects reported during treatment with endothelin receptor antagonists.24,25 Darusentan has been associated with a doubled incidence of fluid overload or oedema compared with placebo. Another study28 examining the effects of avosentan on progression of overt diabetic nephropathy had to be stopped prematurely because of an excess of fluid overload and congestive heart failure in the avosentan group. Kohan and colleagues29 reported that oedema occurred in up to 46% of patients receiving increasing doses of the highly selective EDNRA antagonist atrasentan. Notably, no angio-oedema occurred during our study, a finding of clinical relevance, because combined inhibition of angiotensin-converting enzyme and neutral endopeptidase has previously been associated with increased incidence of angio-oedema caused by decreased breakdown of bradykinin, leading to increased nitric oxide concentrations.31 Additional inhibition of endothelin-converting enzyme—as provided by daglutril—might alleviate this effect by reducing activation of EDNRB, thus decreasing production of nitric oxide.13

Further studies should be done to address whether higher doses of daglutril than were used in this study are needed to detect the antiproteinuric effects previously reported in animal studies and whether daglutril’s blood-pressure lowering effects apply to patients with non-diabetic nephropathies.14 The predominance of men in our study could be a result of the excess of men in the average population of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus who have nephropathy and perhaps environmental factors that result in more men than women consenting to take part in the study. However, the large number of men does not affect the internal validity of the study and should not affect the generalisability of the findings to both sexes; no evidence exists of sex-specific effects of endothelin on hypertension, and previous studies25 of endothelin receptor antagonists showed the same antihypertensive effects in both men and women. Our results from autoregressive modelling18 provide additional evidence that daglutril has an antihypertensive effect—particularly on systolic blood pressure—throughout the whole 24-h observation period, independent of rhythmical (circadian) and non-rhythmical changes in blood pressure. Our sensitivity analyses confirmed the robustness of these results. The study design, measurement of 24-h blood pressure, and the gold-standard procedures used to measure albuminuria and renal haemodynamic and sieving function parameters are major strengths. Results of our per-protocol analyses of efficacy variables were similar to those of the modified intention-to-treat analyses, which confirmed the robustness of our findings. Long-term clinical trials are needed to test whether the blood-pressure lowering effect of daglutril provides consistent nephroprotection and cardioprotection in this high-risk population.

Soure: Lancet

How to use ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in resistant hypertension.


Resistant hypertension is defined as an uncontrolled office blood pressure (BP) despite the use of at least three antihypertensive drugs, in adequate doses and combinations, preferentially including one diuretic. It is a clinical diagnosis based on office BP measurements. Ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) is the cornerstone in the management of patients with resistant hypertension, as it is mandatory for diagnosis, treatment, follow-up and prognosis. In relation to diagnosis, ABPM measurements have classified patients with resistant hypertension into four subgroups: true, white-coat, controlled and masked resistant hypertension. This classification largely defines the therapeutic approach and the follow-up for each group. In this way, the target of antihypertensive treatment is ambulatory BP control and not office BP control. Chronotherapy based on ABPM values might frequently lead to a more rational treatment regimen. In relation to prognosis, uncontrolled ambulatory BP levels at baseline identify a subgroup of patients with a very high cardiovascular risk profile and a significantly worse prognosis. ABPM parameters can provide a better cardiovascular risk stratification than other traditional risk factors and office BPs.

Keywords:

 

Source: Nature