J Jordan1, J Scholze, B Matiba, A Wirth, H Hauner, A M Sharma. 1. Franz-Volhard Clinical Research Center and Helios Klinikum, Medical Faculty of the Charité, Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany. jordan@fvk.charite-buch.de
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:Sibutramine, a serotonin and norepinephrine transporter inhibitor, is widely used as an adjunctive obesity treatment. There have been concerns that norepinephrine reuptake inhibition with sibutramine could exacerbate arterial hypertension. DESIGN: Combined analysis of two placebo-controlled trials. SUBJECTS: The combined data set consisted of 1336 patients. Of these patients, 966 were randomized to sibutramine and 370 were randomized to placebo. MEASUREMENTS: Body weight, blood pressure, heart rate (HR). RESULTS:Sibutramine reduced body weight regardless of basal blood pressure. In the complete set of patients, systolic blood pressure did not change with either intervention over the 48-week period (-0.1+/-15.5 mmHg with sibutramine, -0.2+/-15.2 mmHg with placebo, P=0.9). The change in diastolic blood pressure over the 48 week period was 0.3+/-9.5 mmHg with sibutramine and -0.8+/-9.2 mmHg with placebo (P=0.049). The blood pressure response was not exacerbated in patients with grade 1 or 2 hypertension or in patients with isolated systolic hypertension. Sibutramine treatment caused a slight increase in supine HR that was sustained throughout the studies. CONCLUSIONS:Sibutramine treatment is unlikely to elicit a critical increase in blood pressure even in hypertensive patients. However, blood pressure and HR should be monitored closely. In patients who experience a clinically significant and sustained increase in blood pressure, the drug should probably be discontinued.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE:Sibutramine, a serotonin and norepinephrine transporter inhibitor, is widely used as an adjunctive obesity treatment. There have been concerns that norepinephrine reuptake inhibition with sibutramine could exacerbate arterial hypertension. DESIGN: Combined analysis of two placebo-controlled trials. SUBJECTS: The combined data set consisted of 1336 patients. Of these patients, 966 were randomized to sibutramine and 370 were randomized to placebo. MEASUREMENTS: Body weight, blood pressure, heart rate (HR). RESULTS:Sibutramine reduced body weight regardless of basal blood pressure. In the complete set of patients, systolic blood pressure did not change with either intervention over the 48-week period (-0.1+/-15.5 mmHg with sibutramine, -0.2+/-15.2 mmHg with placebo, P=0.9). The change in diastolic blood pressure over the 48 week period was 0.3+/-9.5 mmHg with sibutramine and -0.8+/-9.2 mmHg with placebo (P=0.049). The blood pressure response was not exacerbated in patients with grade 1 or 2 hypertension or in patients with isolated systolic hypertension. Sibutramine treatment caused a slight increase in supine HR that was sustained throughout the studies. CONCLUSIONS:Sibutramine treatment is unlikely to elicit a critical increase in blood pressure even in hypertensivepatients. However, blood pressure and HR should be monitored closely. In patients who experience a clinically significant and sustained increase in blood pressure, the drug should probably be discontinued.
Authors: Craig L Phillips; Brendon J Yee; Mike I Trenell; John S Magnussen; David Wang; Dev Banerjee; Norbert Berend; Ronald R Grunstein Journal: J Clin Sleep Med Date: 2009-10-15 Impact factor: 4.062