3.9 Article

Effectiveness of the selective aldosterone blocker, eplerenone, in patients with resistant hypertension

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HYPERTENSION
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages 462-468

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jash.2008.05.005

Keywords

Ambulatory blood pressure; antihypertensive agents; glomerular filtration rate; serum aldosterone

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Resistant hypertension is defined as uncontrolled hypertension despite intensive treatment with at least three anti hypertensive agents, one of which ideally should be a diuretic. To determine the efficacy and safety of the selective aldosterone antagonist eplerenone in this population, we studied patients with resistant hypertension (clinic blood pressure [BP] > 140 mm Hg systolic or >90 mm Hg diastolic on maximal doses of more than three antihypertensive agents, including a loop or thiazide diuretic). At baseline and after 12 weeks of eplerenone therapy (50 to 100 mg daily titrated to effect). patients underwent clinic and 24-hour BP measurements, serum potassium, plasma renin activity, and serum aldosterone measurements. Patients (n = 52) completing the trial averaged 62 10 years of age, were overweight (mean body mass index, 32.1 +/- 5.5 kg/m(2)) and had variable renal function (glomerular filtration rate. 106 +/- 38 mL/minute); 70% were men and 74% were non-Black. The mean number of antihypertensive agents at baseline was 3.7 +/- 0.8 (range, three to seven drugs) to achieve a clinic BP of 150.5/84.1 mm Ho. The mean serum aldosterone was 12.9 +/- 7.6 ng/mL and plasma renin activity was 2.3 +/- 2.7 ng/mL/hour. After eplerenone, the change from baseline in the clinic BP was -17.6/-7.9 mm Hg (P < .0001 for both systolic blood pressure [SBP] and diastolic blood pressure [DBP]) and in 24-hour BP was -12.2/-6.0 mm Hg (P < .0001 for both). The number of antihypertensive drugs decreased to 3.3 +/- 0.9 (range. one to seven agents). Plasma potassium increased by 0.30 +/- 0.45 mEq/L (P < .001), but there were only three instances in two patients of mild hyperkalemia (potassium >5.5 mEq/L, but <6.0 mEq/L), despite all patients being on a background therapy that included all angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker. Reductions in clinic and ambulatory BP were related to baseline clinic and ambulatory BP values (r(2) > 0.3 for both SBP and DBP, P < .0001), weakly related to baseline serum aldosterone (r = -0.30; P = .05). and unrelated to plasma renin activity, age, gender, or race. In conclusion, eplerenone demonstrated substantial efficacy in treatment-resistant hypertension and was well-tolerated with modest changes in plasma potassium. Serum aldosterone and plasma renin activity did not predict BP responses to eplerenone in this population. J Am Soc Hypertens 2008:2(6): 462-468. (C) 2008 American Society of Hypertension. All rights reserved.

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