Two Drug Combo Pill May Lower Blood Pressure in Indian Adults

USA: Medication variations that combined
two of three different blood pressure-lowering medications into a single pill
worked equally well in reducing blood pressure and were safe among adults in
India, according to late-breaking science presented today at the American Heart
Association’s Scientific Sessions 2024. The meeting, held in Chicago, from 16-18 November, was a
premier global exchange of the latest scientific advancements, research and
evidence-based clinical practice updates in cardiovascular science.

300 million people in India suffer from high blood
pressure, which is a major worldwide health burden. International
recommendations for hypertension currently recommend mixing different blood
pressure-lowering drugs; however, research has not yet identified which
combinations work best for South Asians.

“South Asians account for one-fourth of the
world’s population, and India, in particular, has an enormous burden of
hypertension, leading to high stroke and cardiovascular disease risk,” said
lead TOPSPIN study author Dorairaj Prabhakaran, M.D., D.M., M.Sc., a
cardiologist and executive director of the Centre for Chronic Disease Control
in New Delhi, India. “Optimal blood pressure management is essential to lower
the cardiovascular complications of high blood pressure.”

In the multicenter trial in India,
called TOPSPIN, almost 2,000 adults were randomly assigned to one of three
treatment groups — to receive a single pill, often called a polypill, that
included a combination of two commonly recommended medications to lower blood
pressure.

Each of the three participant groups
was prescribed a pill combining two of these medications: a renin-angiotensin
enzyme inhibitor (perindopril), which prevent the arteries from narrowing;
calcium channel blockers (amlodipine), which prevent calcium from entering the
heart muscle and arteries; and/or diuretics (indapamide), which help the body
excrete excess salt and water. The primary outcome measured 24-hour ambulatory
systolic blood pressure after taking the combo pill daily for six months.

Between 2022 and 2024, 1,981 adults
with high blood pressure, ages 30 to 79 (median age 52), 42% women, at 35
hospitals across four regions in India were randomly assigned to receive a
single combination pill that included either amlodipine and perindopril;
perindopril and indapamide; or amlodipine and indapamide. At the time of
enrollment, 55% of the participants were already taking some kind of blood
pressure-lowering medication, 18.6% had Type 2 diabetes and 6.2% were current smokers.
Blood pressure was measured at enrollment and again at two, four and six months
for all participants to study the impact of the blood pressure-lowering
medications.

Key findings of the study are:

  • All three combinations of the
    medications lowered blood pressure equally, with about 70% of the study
    participants achieving blood pressure below 140/90 mm Hg.
  • More than 40% of participants
    achieved the stricter blood pressure target of less than 130/80 mm Hg.
  • The absolute reduction in blood
    pressure for participants in all groups was approximately 30/14 mm Hg
    lower when measured in a physician’s office and 14/8 mm Hg lower when
    measured using 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitors.
  • Each of the three combination
    pills had an good safety profile: less than 3% of all study
    participants reported ending treatment due to adverse effects from the
    medications. This confirms a high level of tolerability for the
    medications examined in the trial.
  • The participants in the
    amlodipine-perindopril combination group also experienced a decrease in
    fasting blood sugar levels after six months.

“It was reassuring to find that all
three dual combinations of commonly recommended blood pressure medications were
equally effective,” Prabhakaran said. “This is contrary to the findings
observed in the CREOLE study that examined the impact of a similar group of
three high blood pressure combination pills in Black adults with hypertension
in Sub-Saharan Africa and found amlodipine-based combinations to be superior.”

He noted that this study’s strength
was that it included participants across India, a wide age range (30-79 years),
both men and women, people with and without Type 2 diabetes, and those
previously diagnosed and newly diagnosed with hypertension.

Among the study’s limitations is
that about 17% of participants did not complete the six-month study.

While this study was conducted in
India, it has significant meaning for South Asian adults in the U.S. “More than
five million South Asian people live in the U.S., so these findings have huge
relevance for them,” Prabhakaran said.

Reference: https://newsroom.heart.org/news/two-medication-combo-pill-lowered-blood-pressure-among-adults-in-india?preview=8cee&preview_mode=True

Facebook Comments