Antihypertensive utility of perindopril in a large, general practice-based clinical trial.

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Abstract

The authors evaluated, in a community-based open-label trial, the effectiveness and safety of perindopril in 13,220 US hypertensive patients and studied how physicians adhere to hypertension treatment guidelines. Patients received perindopril 4 mg q.d. for 6 weeks. Based on physicians perception of blood pressure response, the patient was either maintained on 4 mg or the dose was increased to 8 mg for an additional 6 weeks. From baseline to week 12, the mean sitting blood pressure significantly declined from 156.9/94.5 mm Hg to 139.2/84.0 mm Hg. Further dose titration resulted in a clinically significant reduction in blood pressure in all patients with inadequate response on 4 mg at week 6. Blood pressure control (<140/<90 mm Hg) was achieved at 12 weeks in 48.8% patients. The subpopulation analyses demonstrated that perindopril monotherapy was effective in both men and women, in patients of all ethnicities, and in patients <65 and > or =65 years of age. Perindopril was safe and well tolerated in all hypertensive subgroups including high-risk patients. Physicians were more attuned to controlling diastolic than systolic blood pressure, and their adherence to the treatment guidelines was found to be not optimal.

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Julius, S., Cohn, J. N., Neutel, J., Weber, M., Turlapaty, P., Shen, Y., … Lagast, H. (2004). Antihypertensive utility of perindopril in a large, general practice-based clinical trial. Journal of Clinical Hypertension (Greenwich, Conn.), 6(1), 10–17. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1524-6175.2004.02440.x

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