
A single-pill combination of four blood pressure (BP)-lowering medications was significantly more effective than a combination of three therapies, according to research presented at ESC Congress 2024.
New strategies are needed for the treatment of hypertension, according to Principal Investigator, Professor Stefano Taddei from the University of Pisa, Italy, said: “Patients with resistant hypertension on three BP medications, namely a diuretic, a renin-angiotensin system inhibitor and a calcium channel blocker, require the addition of a fourth medication. However, adherence decreases with the number of pills prescribed.2 In the QUADRO trial, we investigated adding bisoprolol, as part of a single-pill combination of four different BP-lowering medications, and found this was more effective than receiving three BP-lowering medications.”
In the double-blind randomized controlled trial, researchers analyzed 183 randomized patients from 49 centers in 13 countries. Patients with resistant hypertension underwent an 8-week run-in period where they received the triple combination of perindopril, indapamide and amlodipine at optimal doses (either 10/2.5/5 mg or 10/2.5/10 mg daily, if tolerated). Patients who continued to have uncontrolled BP after 8 weeks (office systolic BP ≥140 mmHg and 24-hour ambulatory systolic BP ≥130 mmHg), while being adherent to the therapy, were then randomized 1:1 to either continue the same triple therapy or to receive a single-pill combination containing perindopril, indapamide, amlodipine and bisoprolol (at either 10/2.5/5/5 mg or 10/2.5/10/5 mg daily) for 8 weeks.