| Literature DB >> 31595024 |
Stela Dineva1, Katya Uzunova2, Velichka Pavlova2, Elena Filipova2, Krassimir Kalinov3, Toni Vekov4.
Abstract
Hypertension is a complex syndrome of multiple hemodynamic, neuroendocrine, and metabolic abnormalities. The goals of treatment in hypertension are to optimally control high blood pressure and to reduce associated cardiovascular morbidity and mortality using the most suitable therapy available. Hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) and chlorthalidone (CTLD) are with proven hypertensive effects. The topic of our meta-analysis is to compare the efficacy of HCTZ and CTLD therapy in patient with hypertension. A search of electronic databases PubMed, MEDLINE, Scopus, PsyInfo, eLIBRARY.ru was performed. We chose the random-effects method for the analysis and depicted the results as forest plots. Sensitivity analyses were performed in order to evaluate the degree of significance of each study. Of the 1289 identified sources, only nine trials directly compared HCTZ and CTLD and were included in the meta-analysis. Changes in SBP lead to WMD (95% CI) equal to -3.26 mmHg showing a slight but statistically significant prevalence of CTLD. Results from analyzed studies referring to DBP lead to WMD (95% CI) equal to -2.41 mmHg, which is also statistically significant. During our analysis, we found that there were not enough studies presenting enough data on the effect of CTLD and HCTZ on levels of serum potassium and serum sodium. Our meta-analysis has demonstrated a slight superiority for CTLD regarding blood pressure control. At the same time, the two medications do not show significant differences in their safety profile.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31595024 PMCID: PMC6892412 DOI: 10.1038/s41371-019-0255-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hum Hypertens ISSN: 0950-9240 Impact factor: 3.012
Fig. 1Study selection process
Characteristics of articles included in this meta-analysis
| Refs | Study design | Sample sizea | Mean baseline blood pressure (mmHg) | Mean baseline potassium (K+) (mEq/L) | Mean baseline sodium (Na+) (mEq/L) | Dose (daily) | Follow-up or treatment duration (weeks) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Systolic | Diastolic | HCTZ | CTDN | ||||||
| Bakris et al. [ | Randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, study | 609 | 164.6 | 95.4 | NR/NA | NR/NA | 12.5 mg + azilsartan medoxomil 40 mg) | 12.5 mg (+azilsartan medoxomil 40 mg) | 6 |
| Dhalla et al. [ | Propensity score-matched observational study | 29873 | NR/NA | NR/NA | >3.5 | >130 | 12.5 mg/25 mg | 12.5 mg/25 mg | 260 |
| Dorsch et al. [ | Retrospective observational cohort analysis comparing study | 6441 | 142.3 | NR/NA | 4.4 | NR/NA | Individual | Individual | 364 |
| Ernst et al. [ | Randomized, single-blinded, 8-week active treatment study | 30 | 142.0 | 93.2 | 4.20 | NR/NA | 50 mg | 25 mg | 8 |
| Kwon et al. [ | Open-label, randomized, prospective cross-over study | 28 | 152.0 | 94.0 | 4.10 | 143 | 12.5 mg (+candesartan 8 mg) | 6.25 mg (+candesartan 8 mg) | 4 |
| Pareek et al. [ | Randomized, comparative, multicenter parallel group, open-lebel study | 131 | 152.0 | 95.0 | 4.15 | 139 | 12.5 mg (+losartan 25 mg) | 6.25 mg (+losartan 25 mg) | 8 |
| Pareek et al. [ | Double-blind, double dummy, randomized, parallel group, comparative, multicentric study | 34 | 148.7 | 93.7 | NR/NA | NR/NA | 12.5 mg | 6.25 mg | 12 |
| Saseen et al. [ | Retrospective analysis of patients diagnosed with hypertension | 856 | 136.2 | 76.9 | 4.04 | NR/NA | 25 mg | 25 mg | 18 |
| van Blijderveen et al. [ | Population-based observational case-control study | 13787 | NR/NA | NR/NA | NR/NA | >130 | 12.5 mg/25 mg | 12.5 mg/25 mg | NR/NA |
NR/NA not reported/not applicable
aThe sample size includes only patients participating in the comparative analysis
Fig. 2Forest plot–weighted mean difference (WMD)–SBP (mmHg)
Fig. 3Forest plot–weighted mean difference (WMD)–DBP (mmHg)
Fig. 4Forest plot–weighted mean difference (WMD)–serum К+(mEq/L)
Sensitivity analysis
| Excluded study | Pooled WMD (95% CI)–SBP (mmHg) | Pooled WMD (95% CI)–DBP (mmHg) | Pooled WMD (95% CI)–K+ (mEq/L) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bakris et al. [ | −2.81 (−3.99; −1.63) | NA | NA |
| Dorsch et al. [ | −3.96 (−5.26; −2.67) | NA | −0.11 (−0.29; 0.06) |
| Ernst et al. [ | −3.22 (−4.64; −1.81) | −2.44 (−4.22; −0.65) | −0.22 (−0.30; −0.14) |
| Kwon et al. [ | −3.35 (−4.85; −1.86) | NA | NA |
| Pareek et al. [ | −3.31 (−4.82; −1.79) | −2.83 (−3.85; −1.82) | −0.23 (−0.53; 0.07) |
| Pareek et al. [ | −2.99 (−4.36; −1.62) | −2.04 (−3.81; −0.27) | NA |
| Saseen et al. [ | −3.30 (−5.09; −1.51) | −2.19 (−4.68; 0.31) | NA |
CTLD versus HCTZ—direct comparisons
| Parameter | Weighted mean difference (WMD) | 95% CI | Conclusion for efficacy of the preparations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lowest value | Highest value | |||
| Systolic blood pressure | −3.26 | −4.58 | −1.94 | Reduces SBP with ~3 mmHg. The WMD is statistically significant |
| Diastolic blood pressure | −2.41 | −3.87 | −0.95 | Reduces DBP with ~2.41 mmHg. The WMD is statistically significant |
| Serum potassium (mEq/L) | −0.22 | −0.32 | −0.11 | Reduces serum potassium levels with ~0.20 mEq/L. The WMD is statistically significant |