Spironolactone versus placebo, bisoprolol, and doxazosin to determine the optimal treatment for drug-resistant hypertension (PATHWAY-2): a randomised, double-blind, crossover trial
National Institute for Health and Care Research · UCL Biomedical Research Centre · +11 more institutions
Abstract
Optimal drug treatment for patients with resistant hypertension is undefined. We aimed to test the hypotheses that resistant hypertension is most often caused by excessive sodium retention, and that spironolactone would therefore be superior to non-diuretic add-on drugs at lowering blood pressure.
In this double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial, we enrolled patients aged 18-79 years with seated clinic systolic blood pressure 140 mm Hg or greater (or ≥135 mm Hg for patients with diabetes) and home systolic blood pressure (18 readings over 4 days) 130 mm Hg or greater, despite treatment for at least 3 months with maximally tolerated doses of three drugs, from 12 secondary and two primary care sites in the UK. Patients rotated, in a preassigned, randomised order, through 12 weeks of once daily treatment with each of spironolactone (25-50 mg), bisoprolol (5-10 mg), doxazosin modified release (4-8 mg), and placebo, in addition to their baseline blood pressure drugs. Random assignment was done via a central computer system. Investigators and patients were masked to the identity of drugs, and to their sequence allocation. The dose was doubled after 6 weeks of each cycle. The hierarchical primary endpoints were the difference in averaged home systolic blood pressure between spironolactone and placebo, followed (if significant) by the difference in home systolic blood pressure between spironolactone and the average of the other two active drugs, followed by the difference in home systolic blood pressure between spironolactone and each of the other two drugs. Analysis was by intention to treat. The trial is registered with EudraCT number 2008-007149-30, and ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02369081.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 79.77
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 25
Authors
13- BWBryan WilliamsCorresponding
National Institute for Health and Care Research, UCL Biomedical Research Centre, University College London
- TMThomas M. MacDonald
University of Dundee
- SVS. V. Morant
University of Dundee
- DJDavid J Webb
The Queen's Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh
- PSPeter Sever
Imperial College London
Topics & keywords
- Spironolactone
- Doxazosin
- Medicine
- Blood pressure
- Bisoprolol
- Placebo
- Diuretic
- Crossover study
- Good health and well-being