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      Therapeutic Inertia With Initial Low-Dose Quadruple Combination Therapy for Hypertension: Results From the QUARTET Trial

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND:

          Low-dose combinations are a promising intervention for improving blood pressure (BP) control but their effects on therapeutic inertia are uncertain.

          METHODS:

          Analysis of 591 patients randomized to an ultra-low-dose quadruple pill or initial monotherapy. The episode of therapeutic inertia was defined as a patient visit with a BP of >140/90 mm Hg without intensification of antihypertensive treatment. We compared the frequency of therapeutic inertia episodes between Quadpill and initial monotherapy as a proportion of the total population (intention-to-treat analysis with the denominator being all participants randomized) and as a proportion of people with uncontrolled BP (with the denominator being participants with uncontrolled BP).

          RESULTS:

          Therapeutic inertia occurred in fewer participants randomized to Quadpill compared with monotherapy. For example, among the 390 participants with a 6-month follow-up, therapeutic inertia according to unattended BP was 21/192 (11%) versus 45/192 (23%), P =0.002. There were similar rates of therapeutic inertia among those with uncontrolled unattended BP in each group (all P >0.4). Consistent observations were seen with the use of attended office BP measures. The major determinants of not intensifying treatment during follow-up were BP readings that were close to target and large improvements in BP compared with the previous visit.

          CONCLUSIONS:

          Among all treated individuals, low-dose Quadpill reduced the number of therapeutic inertia episodes compared with initial monotherapy. After the first follow-up visit, most high BP values did not lead to treatment intensification in both groups. Education is needed about the importance of treatment intensification despite a significant improvement in BP or BP being close to target.

          REGISTRATION:

          URL: XXX; Unique identifier: ACTRN12616001144404

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          Hypertension
          Hypertension
          Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
          0194-911X
          1524-4563
          March 13 2024
          Affiliations
          [1 ]The George Institute for Global Health, UNSW Sydney (N.W., A.R., T.U., J.C., E.R.A., L.B.).
          [2 ]MBiostats, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Menzies Centre for Health Policy and Economics, The University of Sydney, Australia. (A.v.H.).
          [3 ]Faculty of Medicine and Health, Westmead Applied Research Centre, The University of Sydney, Australia. (S.M., T.U., C.R., C.C.)
          [4 ]Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania (M.N.).
          [5 ]Dobney Hypertension Centre, Medical School Royal Perth Hospital Unit, The University of Western Australia (J.M.N., M.S.).
          [6 ]Kolling Institute of Medical Research, Royal North Shore Hospital,The University of Sydney, Australia. (G.F.)
          [7 ]Department of Cardiology, Royal Perth Hospital (G.H.).
          [8 ]Research & Data Analytics Hub, School of Population Health, Curtin University (C.R.).
          [9 ]Curtin Medical School, Curtin University, Perth, WA (S.J.).
          Article
          10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.123.22284
          38477128
          d878cb4f-f4a3-4792-a849-bc3d30d7d523
          © 2024
          History

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