Effects of amlodipine and other classes of antihypertensive drugs on long-term blood pressure variability: Evidence from randomized controlled trials

Abstract Blood pressure (BP) is monitored and managed to prevent cardiovascular complications of hypertension, but BP variability (BPV) has not been sufficiently studied. This analysis assessed whether patients receiving amlodipine vs other antihypertensive agents had lower BPV after ≥12 weeks of tr...

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Published inJournal of the American Society of Hypertension Vol. 8; no. 5; pp. 340 - 349
Main Authors Wang, Ji-Guang, MD, PhD, Yan, Ping, PhD, Jeffers, Barrett W., PhD
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.05.2014
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ISSN1933-1711
1878-7436
1878-7436
DOI10.1016/j.jash.2014.02.004

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Summary:Abstract Blood pressure (BP) is monitored and managed to prevent cardiovascular complications of hypertension, but BP variability (BPV) has not been sufficiently studied. This analysis assessed whether patients receiving amlodipine vs other antihypertensive agents had lower BPV after ≥12 weeks of treatment. Studies were included if individual subject data were available, had ≥1 active comparator, and treatment duration was ≥12 weeks. BPV was assessed using standard deviation (SD) and coefficient of variation (CV) of systolic BP across visits from 12 weeks. Individual trial and meta-analyses were performed for SD- and CV-based methodology. Five studies (47,558 BPV-evaluable patients) were included. Patient characteristics were largely consistent across the studies, but BP measurements varied from ∼4 months to ∼6 years. BPV with amlodipine was significantly ( P  < .0001) lower vs atenolol and lisinopril; significantly ( P  < .0001) lower than enalapril in one study and numerically, but not significantly lower in another; and similar to chlorthalidone and losartan. Meta-analysis revealed a treatment difference (standard error) for amlodipine vs all active comparators of −1.23 (0.46; P  = .008) mm Hg using SD and −0.86 (0.31; P  = .005) using CV. These findings suggest that amlodipine is effective for minimizing BPV. Future studies need to confirm a causal link between BPV and cerebrovascular/cardiovascular outcomes.
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ISSN:1933-1711
1878-7436
1878-7436
DOI:10.1016/j.jash.2014.02.004