| Literature DB >> 32435193 |
Jacklean Kalibala1, Antoinette Pechère-Bertschi2, Jules Desmeules1,3.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality worldwide in both sexes. Despite considerable progress in better understanding the patterns of disease in women, they are still often undertreated and benefit less from evidence-based treatment. Hypertension is a key contributor to CVD and is also one of the most potent risk factors for heart failure in women. Even with the wide variety of available drugs, blood pressure control is globally suboptimal. Current guidelines do not suggest differential treatment of hypertension for women; however, a growing body of research suggests gender dimorphism in the pathophysiology of hypertension and pharmacological response to cardiovascular drugs. The clinical relevance of theses sex-divergent effects of drugs is still under investigation. Owing to the exponential relationship between blood pressure and cardiovascular mortality, even a modest decrease in blood pressure or therapeutic adhesion could be clinically \relevant. In this review, we explore the known pharmacological and pharmacokinetic sex differences with special attention to the main classes of antihypertensive treatment. Current data shows frequently higher drug exposures in women and more frequent adverse drug reactions in all antihypertensive drug groups. As far as cardiovascular prevention is concerned, sex-specific data is often lacking in clinical trials, highlighting the necessity to further study CVD and their treatment in both men and women.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular drugs; gender; hypertension; pharmacokinetics; pharmacology; sex
Year: 2020 PMID: 32435193 PMCID: PMC7218117 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2020.00564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Sex differences in hepatic metabolism and transporters (P-Gp).
| Sex difference | Hormonal influence | |
|---|---|---|
| Female > Male | Inhibited by oral contraceptives | |
| Female < Male | ||
| Female > Male | Induced by estrogens and oral contraceptives | |
| Female > Male | Induced by estrogens and oral contraceptives | |
| Female < Male | ||
| Conflicting data | ||
| Female = Male | ||
| No consistent data | Inhibited by oral contraceptives | |
| Female > Male | Induced by testosterone and progesterone. | |
| Female < Male | Induced by oral contraceptives | |
| Female = Male | ||
| Female < Male | ||
| Female < Male | Induced by estrogens |
CYP, cytochrome P450; NATs, arylamine N-acetyltransferase; UGTs, Uridine 5′-diphospho-glucuronosyltransferases; TPMT, Thiopurine methyl transferase; P-Gp, glycoprotein P.
Summary of landmark clinical trials for hypertension.
| Trial | No. of patients: | Study population | Treatment arms | Primary outcome | Results | Sex-specific analysis | ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n=9,193 | Adults 55 to 89 years with hypertension and LVH | Losartan vs atenolol | Composite CV event (death, MI or stroke) | Losartan superior to atenolol for primary outcome | –Not tested for primary outcome. | ( | |
| n=3,3357 | Adults >55 years with hypertension and at least 1 other risk factor for CHD | Chlortalidone vs amlodipine/lisinopril | Fatal CHD or nonfatal MI | No differences in primary outcome between treatment groups | –No sex differences in primary outcome | ( | |
| n=6,083 | Adults 65-84 years with hypertension | Enalapril vs hydrochlorothiazide | Composite of Major CV event or death | ACEI superior to THZ for primary outcome | –Primary outcome: No difference between treatment groups for women (HR 1.00) | ( | |
| n=15,245 | Adults at high risk of hypertension | Valsartan vs amlodipine | CV morbidity and mortality | No significant difference in primary outcome between treatment groups | –Primary outcome: Amlodipine superior for women (p= 0.02) | ( | |
| n=11,506 | Adults with systolic hypertension | Benazepril + amlodipine vs benazepril + hydrochlorothiazide | Composite of CV event and death from CV event | CCB + ACEI superior for primary outcome | –For women subgroup: difference between treatment groups not significant for primary outcome (p= 0.06) | ( | |
| n= 3,845 | Elderly > 80 years | Indapamide +/− perindopril vs placebo | Any stroke (fatal or nonfatal) | Indapamide with or without ACEI is associated with reduction in stroke (p = 0.06) and death from any cause (p = 0.02) | -No reporting of sex-specific data | ( | |
| n=9,361 | Adults >50 years with hypertension and increased CV risk | SBP target <130 mmHg (intensive) vs <140 mmHg (standard) | Composite of MI, acute CHD, stroke, HF or death from CV causes | Intensive treatment superior to standard for primary outcome | –No sex-differences (p= 0.45) | ( | |
| n=19,084 | Adults > 18 years with hypertension | Bedtime treatment vs awakening | Major CV event (CVD death, MI, coronary revascularization, HF or stroke) | Bedtime treatment superior to awakening for primary outcome | No sex-differences | ( |
LVH, left ventricular hypertrophy; CV, cardiovascular, MI, myocardial infarction; CHD, coronary heart disease; HF, heart failure; ACEI, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors; CCB, calcium channel blockers, THZ, Thiazide diuretic; HR, hazard ratio.
Pharmacological sex-differences in antihypertensive treatment.
| Drug/Drug class | Sex difference | References |
|---|---|---|
| No PK sex-differences for candesartan, losartan and valsartan (after adjustment for weight). | ( | |
| Enalapril:
–No PK sex-differences –Lower minimum ACE activity after administration of enalapril in women compared to men. | ( | |
| Metoprolol:
–lower oral Cl in women compared to men. –50% higher Cmax and AUC in women compared to men. | ( | |
| Amlodipine:
–No PK sex-differences (after adjustment for weight). –Greater changes in BP for women compared to men. –Higher IV Cl in women compared to men. –Lower oral Cl in women compared to men. | ( | |
| Hydrochlorothiazide:
–No PK sex-differences | ( |
ARB, Angiotensin receptor blocker; ACEI, Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor; Cmax, peak concentration; AUC, area under the curve; PK, pharmacokinetic; Cl, clearance; ADR, adverse drug reactions.