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Adding
Diuretic to Drug Regimen lowers Blood
Pressure
Newswise — A new review shows that diuretics
— drugs often recommended as a first-line
treatment for high blood pressure — are also
effective when added as a second agent to
other blood-pressure lowering drugs.
Moreover, diuretics are effective regardless
of which blood pressure medication the
patient takes them with with, found
reviewers led by Jenny Chen at the
University of British Columbia, in
Vancouver.
Many people with high blood pressure must
take two or more medications to keep their
blood pressure in check.
The reviewers analyzed the findings of 53
studies evaluating diuretics in 15,129
patients to see how much blood pressure
decreases when patients take a diuretic,
like Diuril, with another antihypertensive
drug.
The review appears in the latest issue of
The Cochrane Library, a publication of The
Cochrane Collaboration, an international
organization that evaluates medical
research.
Systematic reviews draw evidence-based
conclusions about medical practice after
considering both the content and quality of
existing medical trials on a topic.
Medical professionals define hypertension as
a blood pressure measurement of equal to or
greater than 140/90 mmHg.
Hypertension is a main contributor to heart
disease, kidney disease and stroke.
Thiazide diuretics, first developed in the
1950s, can be effective in controlling
hypertension and are among the least
expensive drugs available for that purpose.
Other medications for hypertension —
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)
inhibitors like Lotensin, angiotensin
receptor blockers (ARBs) like Avapro and
calcium channel blockers — have been
developed since then.
At the beginning of the studies, patients
had an average blood pressure of 156/101
mmHg. Their average age was 54 years and
most of the patients were white. Studies
lasted from three weeks to 12 weeks, six
weeks on average.
Hydrochlorothiazide was the diuretic used in
nearly all (92 percent) of the studies.
Diuretics were added as a second medication
to newer blood pressure lowering drugs such
as ACE inhibitors, ARBs and calcium channel
blockers.
When added as a second drug, thiazide
diuretics lowered blood pressure between 4/2
mmHg at lower doses and 14/6 mmHg at higher
doses. These results did not depend on the
class of first-line drug prescribed.
“The most important finding is that
diuretics administered as a second-line drug
lower blood pressure to the same degree as
when given alone,” Chen said.
“Blood pressure reduction appears to be
independent of the first-line drug used.”
“The second most important finding,” she
added, “is that the blood pressure lowering
effect was greater with greater doses. This
has not been demonstrated previously in
clinical studies.”
Sandra Taler, M.D., a clinician in the
division of nephrology and hypertension at
the Mayo Clinic, commented on the review.
“For certain drugs — ACE inhibitors and ARBs
— it’s generally been promoted that adding a
diuretic will have a ‘synergistic effect,’”
that is, an effect over and above an
additive effect.
“Adding a diuretic to these drugs should
result in a greater reduction in blood
pressure than just the single effect of each
drug.
"This
study did not find that, and it really
didn’t matter what drug the diuretic was
added to,” she said.
Taler said that the review is important
because 60 percent to 70 percent of people
with high blood pressure need more than one
drug to control their blood pressure.
On average, two to three medications are
required, she said, while some people might
need five or more medications for adequate
control.
“Practice approaches have evolved so that
providers are more likely to start a drug
and not necessarily bring it up to a high
dose, but start a second drug instead,” she
said.
“They may also start a pill that has two
different drugs in it.” This approach limits
side effects while maximizing the
effectiveness of each drug, Taler said.
“It’s good to see that studies do show that
a diuretic is of benefit as a second-line
agent — that if the doctor or nurse
practitioner adds a diuretic as a second
drug, it’s likely to help the patient’s
blood pressure,” Taler said.
Taler said that diuretics are a first-line
choice in patients with uncomplicated high
blood pressure.
However, patients might have other medical
problems, such as diabetes or heart failure
that make other blood pressure medications a
better first-line therapy.
The National Institutes of Health recommend
thiazide diuretics as a first-line treatment
for uncomplicated hypertension; however,
only about one-third to one-half of patients
with high blood pressure receives diuretics
as first-line therapy.
“Despite the fact that we and a few other
independent groups around the world are
recommending thiazides as first-line
therapy, most doctors do not prescribe them
first,” said Chen.
“It is a sad state of affairs, but the drugs
that are prescribed first are usually the
ones that are being marketed to the doctors
by drug companies.”
“Physicians who don’t commonly prescribe
diuretics because they think they don’t work
very well or that they are poorly tolerated
should find this information [from the
review] gives them more confidence in
prescribing them,” Chen concluded.
“The fact that the blood pressure lowering
effect of the diuretics is independent of
the first drug also might lead to more
prescribing of diuretics as the second
drug.”
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