Abstract
Introduction
In most treated patients with hypertension, a two or more drug combination is required to achieve adequate blood pressure (BP) control. In our study we assessed whether the combination of zofenopril + hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) was at least as effective as irbesartan + HCTZ in essential hypertensives with at least one additional cardiovascular risk factor, uncontrolled by a previous monotherapy.
Methods
After a 2-week placebo washout, 361 treated hypertensive patients [office sitting diastolic BP (DBP), ≥90 mmHg], aged 18–75 years, were randomized double blind to 18-week treatment with zofenopril 30 mg plus HCTZ 12.5 mg or irbesartan 150 mg plus HCTZ 12.5 mg once daily, in an international, multicenter study. After the first 6 and 12 weeks, zofenopril and irbesartan doses could be doubled in non-normalized subjects. The primary study end point was the office sitting DBP reduction after 18 weeks of treatment. Secondary end points included office systolic BP (SBP), ambulatory BP and high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP).
Results
The between-treatment difference for office DBP averaged to +1.0 (95% CI −0.4, +0.8) mmHg (P = 0.150), the upper limit of the 95% confidence interval being inferior to the protocol-defined non-inferiority limit (3 mmHg). In the subset of patients with valid ambulatory BP, no difference in 24-h average DBP [n = 181; 6.7 (8.7, 4.6) zofenopril + HCTZ vs. 6.3 (8.8, 3.7) mmHg irbesartan + HCTZ, P = 0.810] and SBP reductions [11.7 (15.4, 8.0) vs. 12.6 (17.2, 8.0) mmHg, P = 0.758] were observed between the two treatment groups. hs-CRP was reduced by zofenopril + HCTZ [−0.52 (−1.05, 0.01) mg/L], while it was increased by irbesartan plus HCTZ [0.97 (0.29, 1.65) mg/L, P = 0.001 between treatments].
Conclusion
In previously monotherapy-treated, uncontrolled patients with hypertension, zofenopril 30–60 mg + HCTZ 12.5 mg is as effective as irbesartan 150–300 mg plus HCTZ 12.5 mg, with the added value of a potential protective effect against vascular inflammation.
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Introduction
Arterial hypertension affects almost 30% of the adult population worldwide [1] and is currently considered as a major risk factor for an array of cardiovascular and related diseases [2]. Numerous randomized, placebo-controlled studies have conclusively demonstrated that in patients with hypertension, blood pressure (BP) reduction lowers the incidence of cardiovascular morbid and fatal events [3, 4].
Large pharmacological trials have also documented that combination therapy with two or more drugs is required to achieve BP control in most patients with hypertension, particularly in those with associated cardiovascular risk factors or at high risk for cardiovascular events [5–8]. For these reasons, guidelines on the management of hypertension currently recommend the use of two drug combinations as a first-line therapy [9, 10].
One of the most effective two drug antihypertensive combinations is that between an angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or an angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB) and a diuretic, in which the ACE inhibitor and the ARB antagonize the counter-regulatory system activity triggered by the diuretic, thus improving the efficacy and tolerability of single-drug components [11].
Zofenopril calcium, a pro-drug of the active compound zofenoprilat, is a highly lipophilic ACE inhibitor which has been successfully and safely employed in the treatment of essential hypertension [12] and acute myocardial infarction or heart failure [13] and also in subgroups of patients with elevated BP [14, 15]. In subjects with essential hypertension, zofenopril has been shown to be as effective as atenolol [16], hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) [17], amlodipine [18], enalapril [19], lisinopril [20], losartan [21], and candesartan [22].
Irbesartan is an ARB, characterized by a high bioavailability, a long duration of action, and a small potential for pharmacological interactions [23]. The drug has showed a high efficacy in lowering BP in hypertensive patients, particularly those with renal impairment, where it demonstrated the most remarkable evidence of efficacy within the ARB class [24]. Comparative clinical trials performed in mild-to-moderate hypertension showed equal efficacy, but better tolerability of irbesartan, compared to the other major antihypertensive classes, including beta-blockers (atenolol), calcium antagonists (amlodipine), ACE inhibitors (enalapril), and renin inhibitors (aliskiren), and superior efficacy as compared to doxazosin [23, 24].
Both zofenopril and irbesartan have been also successfully employed in hypertensive patients in combination with a diuretic [23–26]. However, since direct comparative data on the antihypertensive efficacy and safety of this two drug combination are lacking and since most studies did not test the efficacy of the highest available dose of zofenopril (60 mg) plus HCTZ, the present study was devised. Irbesartan was selected as comparator, because its efficacy was shown to be superior to that of other common ARBs such as losartan and valsartan [23, 24]. To comply with the current recommendations, the patients targeted for treatment were those with an essential hypertension not controlled by a previous monotherapy associated with one or more additional cardiovascular risk factors. To make the comparison particularly stringent, efficacy assessment was based not only on conventional office BP measurements taken 24 h post-dosing, but also on ambulatory monitoring over 24 h.
Methods
Study Population
Essential hypertension patients (sitting office diastolic blood pressure (DBP) ≥90 mmHg) of both genders, aged 18–75 years, with at least one additional cardiovascular risk factor, uncontrolled by previous monotherapy, were eligible for study participation. The following cardiovascular risk factors were considered among the inclusion criteria [9]: (a) current smoking; (b) elevated total cholesterol (>190 mg/dL) or specific lipid-lowering drug treatment; (c) elevated low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (>115 mg/dL) or specific lipid-lowering drug treatment; (d) low high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (<40 mg/dL in males and <46 mg/dL in females) or specific lipid-lowering drug treatment; (e) diabetes mellitus controlled by diet or specific anti-diabetic therapy (HbA1c ≤7.5%); (f) abdominal obesity: waist circumference <102 cm in males and <88 cm in females, or body mass index (BMI) between 25 and 32 kg/m2; and (g) family history of premature cardiovascular disease (males at age <55 years and females at age <65 years).
Patients were excluded if they had: (a) secondary or malignant hypertension; (b) isolated systolic hypertension; (c) orthostatic hypotension [office systolic blood pressure (SBP), drop upon standing ≥20 mmHg]; (d) history of heart failure requiring medical treatment; (e) myocardial infarction or cerebrovascular accidents in the previous 6 months; (f) hemodynamically significant cardiac valve disease; (g) severe or clinically significant systemic, renal, hepatic, neurological, or psychiatric disease; (h) moderate-severe obesity (BMI >32 kg/m2); (i) large (circumference >32 cm) or tiny upper arm (circumference <24 cm); and (j) known hypersensitivity to ACE inhibitors, ARBs, or thiazide diuretics.
Pregnant women and breast-feeding mothers were excluded as well. Women with childbearing potential or within 2 years from menopause had to practice an effective method of birth control and were required to have a negative urine pregnancy test.
The study was conducted according to Good Clinical Practice guidelines and the protocol was approved by the ethics committees of the centers involved. All procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional and national) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000 and 2008. Informed consent was obtained from all patients for being included in the study.
Study Design
This was an international, multicenter, randomized (1:1), double-blind, parallel group study conducted at 27 hospitals located in five different European countries: seven centers in Italy, three in Greece, three in Lithuania, four in Romania, and ten in Turkey. The study consisted of a 2-week single-blind run-in period during which previous antihypertensive treatment was stopped and replaced with placebo, followed by 18 weeks of double-blind treatment with zofenopril or irbesartan at the initial doses of 30 or 150 mg combined with HCTZ 12.5 mg. Placebo and study drugs were given orally and once daily (between 9 and 11 a.m.) with a glass of water. After the first 6 and 12 weeks of active treatment, the dose of zofenopril or ramipril had to be doubled, respectively, to 60 and 300 mg, if office SBP was ≥140 mmHg or office DBP was ≥90 mmHg in non-diabetic patients and if office SBP was ≥130 mmHg or office DBP was ≥80 mmHg in diabetic patients [27].
At the screening visit, informed consent was obtained and medical history collected. At the same visit, physical examination, a 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG), BP and heart rate measurements and laboratory tests (blood count, glucose, total, LDL and HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, uric acid, creatinine, sodium and potassium, transaminases and γ-GT, total bilirubin, HBA1c, high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), urinalysis, and urine pregnancy tests) were carried out locally. No centralized assessment of laboratory tests was foreseen. Physical examination and BP and heart rate measurements were repeated at each visit (6, 12, and 18 weeks after randomization), while an ECG was assessed again and laboratory tests checked at the end of the 18 weeks of double-blind treatment. Adverse events, assumption of concomitant medications, and compliance to treatment were assessed at each visit. At the end of the placebo run-in period and 18 weeks of double-blind treatment, BP was measured by 24-h ambulatory monitoring.
Office Blood Pressure and Heart Rate Measurement
Blood pressure and heart rate were measured in the office by a validated, automatic, electronic, upper arm sphygmomanometer (A&D UA-767PC, A&D Company Limited, Tokyo, Japan) [28], approximately 24 h after the last placebo or drug intake. The arm cuff was kept at the heart level during every BP measurement. Three measurements, taken at 2-min intervals, after 5 min of rest in the sitting position were averaged and used as the office BP reference value. Blood pressure and heart rate values were also taken after 1 and 4 min of standing.
Ambulatory Blood Pressure Measurements
Ambulatory BP monitoring was performed at randomization and the final visit, non-invasively, over 24 h by an oscillometric, validated, automatic, electronic device (A&D TM-2430, A&D Company Limited, Tokyo, Japan) [29]. The monitoring cuff was wrapped around the non-dominant arm and the patient was asked to keep her/his arm still during the automatic BP measurements. The device was programmed to measure BP every 15 min throughout the whole monitoring period. Each recording started in the morning, immediately after office BP assessment and administration of placebo or active treatment. Patients were then sent home, asked to resume normal life and to come back 24 h later for removal of the device. Results of the recording were read by connecting the BP measuring device to a wireless interface which sent data to a centralized data management center (Central Core Laboratory, Biotechmed, Varese, Italy) through the mobile telephone network and the web [30]. Traces had to be analyzed real time and in case of a bad-quality recording (see below) the investigator was contacted by the central core laboratory to repeat the recording in the next 2 days, whenever possible.
Data Analysis
The primary efficacy end point of the study was the between-treatment comparison of sitting office DBP changes from baseline to the end of the 18 weeks of double-blind treatment.
This was a non-inferiority trial; thus the hypothesis was that zofenopril plus HCTZ had to be defined as being non-inferior to irbesartan plus HCTZ in case of a difference within 3 mmHg for DBP, with a common standard deviation of 9 mmHg. Using a one-tailed t test with a 0.025 significance level and an 80% power, the estimated number of patients to be randomized was 320 (including a 10% dropout rate), with 160 for each treatment group.
Analysis was performed on patients valid for intention to treat, defined as all randomized patients receiving at least one dose of active treatment drug and having at least one office BP measurement after randomization. The last-observation-carried-forward method was used for patients prematurely leaving the study. The per-protocol population included all randomized patients completing the 18-week double-blind study period without major protocol violations and was used for confirmatory analysis.
Secondary study end points were between-treatment comparison of: (a) office sitting SBP changes after 18 weeks of double-blind treatment; (b) the percentage of patients with a sitting office SBP <140 mmHg and DBP <90 mmHg after 18 weeks of double-blind treatment; (c) the percentage of patients with a sitting office SBP <130 mmHg and DBP <80 mmHg after 18 weeks of double-blind treatment; (d) the percentage of normalized (sitting office SBP <140 mmHg and DBP <90 mmHg) plus responder patients (sitting office SBP reduction ≥20 mmHg or DBP reduction ≥10 mmHg) after 18 weeks of double-blind treatment; (e) changes in 24-h average SBP and DBP after 18 weeks of treatment; (f) hourly averages of SBP and DBP before and during treatment; (g) SBP and DBP changes in the last 6 h of the dosing interval after 18 weeks of treatment; (h) smoothness index of SBP and DBP after 18 weeks of treatment [31].
The analysis of 24-h BP recordings was preceded by removal of artifacts according to previously described editing criteria [32]. Recordings were considered valid when no more than 1 h was missing over the 24 h and when at least 70% of the expected measurements were available.
Safety analysis was applied to all randomized patients, by calculating the incidence of adverse events and changes in laboratory data or ECG during the study.
Between-treatment differences in mean sitting office DBP changes at week 18 were assessed by analysis of covariance, by adjusting for the baseline value and considering the center effect. Given the unbalanced distribution of cardiovascular risk factors between the two randomization groups, an analysis was run taking into account the baseline value, the country effect, and the presence of at least one cardiovascular risk factor among advanced age, increased waist circumference, current smoking, alcohol drinking, and diabetes. The latter analysis was applied to all the secondary end points. Comparison of normalized and normalized plus responder patients between the two treatment groups was performed by the Chi-square test. Subgroup analysis by drug doses, type of hypertension (mild or moderate), and presence of diabetes was also made. The level of statistical significance was kept at 0.05 throughout the whole study. Data are shown as mean ± SD, mean and 95% confidence interval, and absolute (n) or relative (%) frequency.
All data analysis was performed using SAS Software Version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., NC, USA).
Results
Baseline Demographic and Clinical Data
A total of 408 patients were screened, but 47 were lost during the placebo washout period. Thus the number of patients randomized to one of the two treatment arms was 361. Of these patients 327 completed the 18-week double-blind randomized phase, while 34 discontinued the study because of consent withdrawal (n = 16), lack of compliance to study procedures (n = 7), adverse events (n = 7), lack of efficacy (n = 1), protocol violation (n = 2), or being lost to follow-up (n = 1). A flowchart of the patients throughout the study is presented in Fig. 1.
Overall, 353 patients were eligible for the intention-to-treat analysis (175 in the zofenopril plus HCTZ and 178 in the irbesartan plus HCTZ treatment group) and 294 for the per-protocol analysis (152 in the zofenopril plus HCTZ and 142 in the irbesartan plus HCTZ treatment group). 181 out of 356 patients undergoing ambulatory BP monitoring at baseline had valid recordings and were included in this subgroup analysis (95 randomized to zofenopril plus HCTZ and 86 to irbesartan plus HCTZ).
As shown in Table 1, patients randomized to zofenopril plus HCTZ displayed a higher cardiovascular risk profile with respect to those randomized to irbesartan plus HCTZ: they were older, made a broader use of concomitant therapies, and showed a larger prevalence of additional cardiovascular risk factors besides hypertension.
The subgroup of patients undergoing a 24-h BP monitoring and randomized to zofenopril plus HCTZ was older than that assigned to the irbesartan plus HCTZ group (58 ± 9 vs. 54 ± 10 years, P = 0.005), while no between-treatment differences were observed for other demographic and clinical data. In the ambulatory BP monitoring subgroup, entry office SBP and DBP values did not differ between the two treatment arms (151 ± 13/96 ± 5 mmHg zofenopril plus HCTZ and 151 ± 11/97 ± 5 mmHg irbesartan plus HCTZ, P = 0.780 for SBP and P = 0.255 for DBP).
Drug Dosing
The 60-mg dose of zofenopril in combination with HCTZ 12.5 mg was taken at the end of the study by 68.6% of patients randomized to this drug and the 300-mg dose of irbesartan (plus HCTZ 12.5 mg) by 61.2% of the patients (P = 0.183). The proportion of patients under full drug dose did not differ in the subgroup of obese patients (77.8% zofenopril vs. 64.9 irbesartan, P = 0.135).
In the ambulatory BP monitoring subgroup, the proportion of patients taking a higher dose of both drugs was in line with the figure for the main study population (72.6% zofenopril vs. 65.1% irbesartan, P = 0.275).
Sitting Office Blood Pressure
The between-treatment difference for office DBP (primary end point) averaged to +1.0 (95% CI −0.4, +0.8) mmHg (P = 0.150), with the upper limit of the 95% confidence interval being inferior to the protocol-defined non-inferiority limit of 3 mmHg.
Figure 2 shows baseline-adjusted office sitting DBP and SBP reductions in the intention-to-treat population after correction for the country effect and type of cardiovascular risk factors. Office BP values were progressively and significantly (P < 0.01) reduced by both treatment regimens during the study. At the final evaluation (week 18), mean sitting office DBP reduction (and 95% confidence interval) achieved with zofenopril combined with the diuretic was 17.6 (19.9, 15.3) vs. 15.1 (17.5, 12.6) mmHg with irbesartan plus HCTZ, showing a difference of −2.6 (−5.9, +0.8) mmHg (P = 0.134) between the two drug treatments. Office sitting SBP reductions at the end of the study were 21.5 (24.5, 18.6) mmHg in the zofenopril and 20.6 (24.1, 17.2) mmHg in the irbesartan treatment group, with no between-treatment differences (P = 0.691).
At the end of the study, office sitting DBP and SBP reductions were similar with zofenopril 30 mg plus HCTZ [DBP 16.4 (18.6, 14.3) mmHg; SBP 18.2 (21.8, 14.6) mmHg] and with irbesartan 150 mg plus HCTZ [15.0 (17.4, 12.6) and 22.0 (25.9, 18.1) mmHg] in the subgroup of patients with diabetes (P = 0.366 between groups for DBP and P = 0.115 for SBP).
Normalized and Responder Patients
Sitting office BP normalization (SBP <140 and DBP <90 mmHg) was achieved by the end of the 18 weeks of double-blind treatment by a similar proportion of patients treated with zofenopril plus HCTZ (79.6%) and irbesartan plus HCTZ (79.5%, P = 0.973). The rate of normalized patients was lower when a tighter BP goal was considered (SBP <130 and DBP <80 mmHg): 59.3% zofenopril plus HCTZ vs. 53.6% irbesartan plus HCTZ (P = 0.387). Finally, the proportion of normalized or responder patients was identical between zofenopril plus the diuretic (88.4%) and irbesartan plus the diuretic (88.5%; P = 0.981).
The results of the intention-to-treat analysis on office BP changes and normalized and responder rates were confirmed on the per-protocol population (data not shown).
Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring
Also in the population of patients with valid ambulatory recordings, sitting office DBP and SBP reductions were similar with zofenopril plus HCTZ [15.4 (17.5, 13.2) and 21.2 (24.4, 18.0) mmHg] and irbesartan plus HCTZ [16.8 (19.4, 14.2) and 23.2 (27.1/19.2) mmHg; P = 0.397 for DBP and P = 0.458 for SBP]. Treatment-induced 24-h DBP and SBP reductions under zofenopril plus HCTZ did not significantly differ from those under irbesartan plus HCTZ (Table 2).
As shown in Fig. 3, both drugs reduced BP during every hour in which the 24 h were divided. The drug efficacy in the last 6-h period from the dosing interval, covering the last part of the night sleep and the hours of awakening, was similar for both DBP [5.6 (8.3, 3.0) vs. 5.7 (9.0, 2.4) mmHg; P = 0.969] and SBP [9.8 (14.4, 5.3) vs. 12.0 (17.7, 6.3) mmHg; P = 0.561].
Assessment of the homogeneity of the BP control by the smoothness index, showed a comparable persistent antihypertensive efficacy of the two drugs over the 24 h for both DBP and SBP (Fig. 4).
Effects on hs-CRP
In total, 91 patients had evaluable blood samples for hs-CRP quantification. In the 51 patients treated with zofenopril plus diuretic, hs-CRP was reduced from 1.59 ± 2.88 to 1.40 ± 2.03 mg/L, while in the 40 patients treated with the irbesartan plus diuretic hs-CRP remained stable during treatment (baseline 1.44 ± 2.20 mg/L; end of treatment 1.45 ± 2.17 mg/L). This resulted in a small baseline-adjusted reduction in hs-CRP by zofenopril [−0.52 (−1.05, 0.01) mg/L] and in a slight increase by irbesartan [0.97 (0.29, 1.65) mg/L, P = 0.001 between treatments].
Safety and Tolerability
Laboratory and safety analyses were carried out in all randomized patients (n = 361). A total number of 88 (24.4%) patients reported adverse events (48 in the zofenopril plus HCTZ and 40 in the irbesartan plus HCTZ treatment group): 126 adverse events (71 under zofenopril and 55 under irbesartan) were reported in at least 2 patients and most of them were of a mild intensity. Seven (1.9%) patients were withdrawn from the study due to adverse events, all considered as drug related (4 in the zofenopril and 3 in the irbesartan group).
Events attributed to study treatment occurred in 26 patients (7.2%), of which 14 (7.8%) were treated with zofenopril plus the diuretic and 12 (6.6%) with irbesartan plus the diuretic. A total of 24 drug-related adverse events were reported in at least two patients with a comparable distribution between the two study groups (10 zofenopril vs. 14 irbesartan). The most common drug-related adverse events observed under zofenopril were cough (4 cases), malaise (3 cases), and headache (2 cases), whereas dizziness (4 cases), asthenia (3 cases), abdominal pain (3 cases), and hypotension (2 cases) were more prevalent in irbesartan-treated patients. All these side effects may be expected with these classes of drugs.
Treatment was accompanied either by no change or only small and meaningless changes in the laboratory values considered in the study.
Discussion
In hypertensive patients uncontrolled by a previous monotherapy and with additional cardiovascular risk factors, the office DBP reduction observed after 18 weeks of treatment with zofenopril 30 or 60 mg plus HCTZ 12.5 mg once daily was similar to that of irbesartan 150 or 300 mg plus HCTZ 12.5 mg once daily. This effect was obtained with the higher drug dosage in a slightly larger proportion of subjects treated with zofenopril (69%) than with irbesartan (61%), most likely because of a worse cardiovascular risk profile in the former group. Additionally, the antihypertensive effect of the zofenopril 30 mg plus HCTZ 12.5 mg combination was superior to that of the irbesartan 150 mg plus HCTZ 12.5 mg combination.
Approximately, 80% of patients attained the target BP of <140/90 mmHg, 60% that of <130/80 mmHg, and 90% were classified as normalized or responders; such proportions were well balanced between the two drug treatment arms. These results strongly support that in the majority of patients not responding to a single antihypertensive medication, combination treatment with two drugs, including that between a drug acting on the angiotensin–renin–aldosterone system and a thiazide diuretic, may substantially increase the chance of response [33].
The BP lowering effect of both medications was well maintained also in subgroups of patients, such as diabetics, known to often show a reduced response to antihypertensive drug treatment [34]. This result, although limited to a small subgroup of 63 patients, also strongly supports that ACE inhibitors or ARBs are among the most suited first options in these high-risk patients [9].
The good office BP control obtained with zofenopril and irbesartan was confirmed over 24 h by ambulatory monitoring. Both drugs displayed a similarly smooth and long-lasting antihypertensive effect, ensuring a good BP coverage also in the hours farthest from the last drug intake [35]. Interestingly, the magnitude of the 24-h BP reduction yielded by zofenopril and irbesartan plus the diuretic in our study was comparable with that observed in previous studies based on ambulatory BP monitoring and making use of the same doses of the two drug combinations [36, 37].
This is the first study specifically assessing the antihypertensive efficacy of high-dose zofenopril (60 mg) plus HCTZ 12.5 mg. In previous studies, treatment with a 30- or 60-mg dose of zofenopril combined with HCTZ 12.5 mg once daily was superior to monotherapy with either agent [25, 36]. In a dose-finding multifactorial study, the proportions of normalized and of normalized or responders to zofenopril plus HCTZ were 57% and 80%, respectively, for the 30-mg dose, and 79% and 93%, for the 60-mg dose (80% and 88% in our study) [36]. In another study, administration of zofenopril 30 mg and HCTZ 12.5 mg combination for 8 weeks to 369 patients who were not responsive to zofenopril monotherapy resulted in an increase in the response rate up to 64% for DBP and 53% for SBP [26].
The benefits of the irbesartan and HCTZ combination therapy have been demonstrated in a number of trials in patients with mild hypertension [38–40]. These include the COSIMA [41] study and the INCLUSIVE [42] study, evaluating the efficacy of the combination in patients failing to achieve BP control with monotherapy. In such studies, 8-week treatment with a combination of irbesartan 150 or 300 mg and HCTZ 12.5 or 25 mg resulted in 50–70% of patients achieving BP normalization.
This is also the first study comparing zofenopril in combination with a thiazide diuretic with an ARB combined with a diuretic: previous direct comparative studies based on zofenopril monotherapy did not show any relevant difference in treatment efficacy vs. an ARB-based monotherapy regimen [21, 22]. The combination between irbesartan and a thiazide diuretic has also never been directly compared against that of an ACE inhibitor plus a diuretic, while evidence from comparative trials vs. an ACE-inhibitor monotherapy is available: in these studies irbesartan monotherapy at doses ranging between 75 and 300 mg was as effective in lowering office BP and achieving BP control as enalapril [43–46] or fosinopril [47].
Our study also explored the possible positive effect of zofenopril and irbesartan on markers of vascular inflammation. As a matter of fact, the results of epidemiological and clinical studies support a pivotal role for inflammation in all phases of atherosclerosis, from endothelial cell dysfunction to the culmination in acute coronary syndrome [48]. In our hypertensive subjects, treatment with zofenopril plus HCTZ reduced hs-CRP, while this was not the case for irbesartan-treated patients. This is the first evidence of such an effect for zofenopril and it strongly supports previous findings in patients with hypertension that treatment with zofenopril may be associated with a reduction in oxidative stress, an improvement in the nitric oxide pathway, and an anti-inflammatory vasculoprotective effect [49]. The above results, although based on small numbers, allow speculating that the sulfhydryl ACE-inhibitor zofenopril, in addition to ensuring BP control, may contribute to slow down the development of atherosclerosis.
Both combination treatments were well tolerated, with a very limited number of drug-related adverse events. As expected, the combination containing zofenopril was associated with a slightly larger incidence of cough, while dizziness or asthenia were more commonly reported by irbesartan-treated patients. Other adverse drug reactions were well balanced between the two groups and the overall tolerability profile of zofenopril and irbesartan was comparable with that in previous reports [25, 50, 51].
The results of our study deserve some notes of caution. First, the sample size of patients with valid ambulatory BP recordings approximated 50% of that included in the primary study end-point analysis. Unfortunately, this occurred because many recordings were missing or qualitatively inadequate. However, in the ambulatory BP monitoring subgroup, the effect of both drugs on office BP was comparable with that observed for the whole study population, indicating that the two populations were homogeneous. Second, the estimated standard deviation of the difference (9 mmHg) may have been too large. However, a post hoc sample size calculation, using a smaller value (5 mmHg) and retaining the same number of subjects, returned a power close to 100%, thus confirming the appropriateness of our study sample size. Third, analyses on subgroups such as diabetics were not conceived at the time the study was planned. Consequently, we cannot exclude that our findings regarding such a subgroup might be the result of chance. Fourth, the population with valid hs-CRP assessment was smaller than the main study population, though the effect observed in zofenopril-treated patients for this inflammatory marker is in line with findings from previous studies [49]. We also attempted an exploratory analysis on patients with abnormal hs-PCR levels (>3 mg/L) [52, 53], but since only 11 patients fell in this group we could not obtain any reliable result. Finally, we did not foresee adjustment of randomization in the two groups by specific comorbidities, and since the two groups differed in several comorbid features at baseline we cannot exclude that some drug effects might be related to these factors. For these reasons we settled to adjust the comparison, whenever possible, for these source of unbalance.
Conclusion
The present pharmacological trial demonstrated that the combinations of zofenopril and HCTZ and that of irbesartan and HCTZ both provide similarly effective, prolonged and well-tolerated control of BP in hypertensive patients not controlled by previous monotherapy and with one or more additional cardiovascular risk factors. The reduction in hs-CRP observed with treatment with zofenopril plus the diuretic suggests an additional beneficial effect of this combination therapy on vascular inflammation.
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Acknowledgments
The present study was supported by a grant from Menarini International Operations Luxembourg S.A. Article processing charges were funded by Menarini International Operations Luxembourg S.A. S. Omboni is the guarantor for this article and takes responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole. Study coordinators: E. Agabiti-Rosei (Italy), A. Manolis (Greece). List of study sites and investigators—Italy: F. Portaluppi (Ferrara), M. Santonastaso (Vittorio Veneto), M. Destro (Broni), G. Lembo (Pozzilli), A. Mezzetti (Chieti), P.L. Caroli (Lecce), A. Gargiulo (Caserta); Greece: A. Manolis (Athens), K. Tsioufis (Athens), V. Adamopoulou (Piraeus), V. Votteas (Athens); Lithuania: R. Kavaliauskiene (Klaipeda), G. Sakalyte (Kaunas), R. Steponéniené (Vilnius); Romania: L. Nedelcu (Brasov), A. Abaitancei (Brasov), L. Mathè (Tg. Mures), D. Nistorescu (Bucharest), D. Tint (Brasov); Turkey: C. Erol (Ankara), D. Ural (Izmit), F. Ozerkan (Izmir), T. Celik (Ankara), A. Abaci (Ankara), N. Baris (Izmir), S. Kucukoglu (Istanbul), B. Ilerigelen (Istanbul), S. Guneri (Izmir), M. Ozenci (Ankara).
Conflict of interest
E. Agabiti-Rosei has occasionally received grants for lectures or for attending scientific meetings by the manufacturers of zofenopril (Menarini International Operations Luxembourg S.A., Menarini Group). A. Manolis has occasionally received grants for lectures or for attending scientific meetings by the manufacturers of zofenopril. D. Zava is an employee of Istituto Lusofarmaco d’Italia, Menarini Group. S. Omboni has occasionally received grants for lectures or for attending scientific meeting by the manufacturers of zofenopril.
Compliance with ethics guidelines
The study was conducted according to Good Clinical Practice guidelines and the protocol was approved by the Ethics Committees of the centers involved. All procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional and national) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000 and 2008. Informed consent was obtained from all patients for being included in the study.
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On behalf of the ZODIAC Study Group.
Trial registration: EudraCT number: 2008-002439-3.
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Agabiti-Rosei, E., Manolis, A., Zava, D. et al. Zofenopril Plus Hydrochlorothiazide and Irbesartan Plus Hydrochlorothiazide in Previously Treated and Uncontrolled Diabetic and Non-diabetic Essential Hypertensive Patients. Adv Ther 31, 217–233 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-013-0090-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-013-0090-8