
Antihypertensive Efficacy of the Oral Direct Renin Inhibitor Aliskiren as Add‐On Therapy in Patients Not Responding to Amlodipine Monotherapy
Author(s) -
Drummond Waymon,
Munger Mark A.,
Rafique Mohammed,
Maboudian Mojdeh,
Khan Mahmudul,
Keefe Deborah L.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the journal of clinical hypertension
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.909
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1751-7176
pISSN - 1524-6175
DOI - 10.1111/j.1524-6175.2007.06614.x
Subject(s) - amlodipine , aliskiren , medicine , blood pressure , combination therapy , pharmacology , urology , renin–angiotensin system
This study investigated the addition of the direct renin inhibitor aliskiren to amlodipine in patients with mild to moderate hypertension that was inadequately controlled with amlodipine alone. Following once‐daily treatment with amlodipine 5 mg for 4 weeks, patients whose hypertension responded inadequately to therapy (mean sitting diastolic blood pressure [DBP] 90–109 mm Hg) (n=545) were randomized to 6 weeks of double‐blind treatment with amlodipine 5 mg plus aliskiren 150 mg, amlodipine 5 mg, or amlodipine 10 mg. At the study's end, mean systolic blood pressure and DBP reductions with the combination of aliskiren 150 mg and amlodipine 5 mg (11.0/8.5 mm Hg) were significantly greater ( P <.0001) than with amlodipine 5 mg (5.0/4.8 mm Hg)—the comparator group—but similar to amlodipine 10 mg (9.6/8.0 mm Hg). All treatments were well tolerated. Edema occurred more frequently with amlodipine 10 mg (11.2%) than with combination therapy (2.1%) or amlodipine 5 mg (3.4%). In conclusion, aliskiren 150 mg plus amlodipine 5 mg shows similar but not better blood pressure‐lowering efficacy when compared with amlodipine 10 mg in patients not completely responsive to amlodipine 5 mg; less edema was noted with combination therapy.