Dyskalemia risk associated with fixed-dose anti-hypertensive medication combinations.

Journal: Journal Of Human Hypertension
Published:
Abstract

A model-based meta-analysis quantified comparative dyskalemia risk (hyper- or hypo-kalemia) in hypertensive patients treated with angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), a calcium channel blocker (CCB) and/or a thiazide diuretic (hydrochlorothiazide; HCTZ) as monotherapy or as fixed-dose combinations. Among 15 randomized controlled trials in a US Food and Drug Administration regulatory review database, dyskalemia events were reported by five trials (24 treatment arms, 11,030 subjects, 8-week median follow up time). The five trials evaluated monotherapy (ARB or HCTZ) alongside dual (ARB + HCTZ, ARB + CCB, or HCTZ + CCB) or triple fixed-dose combinations (ARB + CCB + HCTZ). Hypo- and hyper-kalemia rates were analyzed jointly to account for correlation. Significant drug class, drug, or dose effects were included in the final model. Effect on various drug- and dose combinations on dyskalemia risk were simulated and compared with model-estimated placebo arm dyskalemia risk. After a typical follow-up of 8 weeks, fixed-dose combinations of ARB with a high dose (25 mg) of HCTZ were associated with a higher hypokalemia risk difference (RD) from placebo (e.g.,Valsartan + HCTZ: 2.52%[95%CIs:1.17, 4.38%]). However, when ARB was combined with a lower, 12.5 mg dose of HCTZ, hypokalemia RD from placebo was not significant (Valsartan + HCTZ: -0.03%[-0.80, 0.71%]). ARB monotherapy raised hyperkalemia RD from placebo (1.3%[0.3, 3.6%]). Hyperkalemia risk was not appreciably higher than placebo for any FDC that combined ARB with HCTZ (Valsartan + HCTZ: 0.06%[-1.48, 1.64%]). In uncomplicated hypertensive patients, ARB + 12.5 mg HCTZ fixed-dose combinations are safer with respect to dyskalemia than either ARB or HCTZ monotherapy for initial antihypertensive treatment.

Authors
Li Qin, Nancy Zhang, Junichi Ishigami, Edgar Miller, Marc Pfister, Andrew Moran, Eugène Cox