Introduction
Hypertension is the most important risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and
mortality. It is estimated that hypertension is responsible for 9.4 million deaths
per year1 and has been associated
with an increased risk of stroke, myocardial infarction, heart failure and renal
failure.2-4
-
1
A comparative risk assessment of burden of disease and injury
attributable to 67 risk factors and risk factor clusters in 21 regions,
1990-2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study
2010.
Lancet, 2012
-
2
Is blood pressure control for stroke prevention the correct
goal?
Stroke, 2015
-
4
Systolic blood pressure and functional outcome in patients with
acute stroke: a Mexican registry of acute cerebrovascular disease
(RENAMEVASC).
Arch Cardiol Mex, 2011
Recent projections suggest that the prevalence of hypertension will increase by 30%
by 20255 with low- and
middle-income countries (LMICs) accounting for three quarters of the world’s
hypertensive population. Currently more than 80% of the attributable burden of blood
pressure-related diseases are in LMICs.6 Recent meta-analyses showed that the prevalence of
hypertension was the highest among Latin America and Caribbean populations. Moreover
it is estimated that one of three individuals are hypertensive in these
countries.7 Rapid lifestyle
changes has led to an increase in several modifiable risk factors associated with
hypertension such as sugar consumption, overweight, obesity and physical
inactivit.8-10 In addition socioeconomic status
(SES) influences hypertension rates with an increased prevalence among those with
the lowest SES defined by income, occupation and education.11-13 In Colombia, recently we reported that lower
awareness, treatment and control of hypertension is observed between men younger
than 50 years old, with low level of education, low income and living on rural
areas.14 Different reason has
been proposed to explain the effects of SES on blood pressure (BP) such as level of
education,15 stress,16 less quality of life,17 working conditions,18 healthcare and medicine
access.14
-
5
Global burden of hypertension: analysis of worldwide
data.
Lancet, 2005
-
6
Global, regional, and national life expectancy, all-cause
mortality, and cause-specific mortality for 249 causes of death, 1980-2015:
a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study
2015.
Lancet, 2016
-
7
Prevalence of hypertension in low- and middle-income
countries
Medicine (Baltimore)., 2015
-
8
Sugar consumption and global prevalence of obesity and
hypertension: an ecological analysis.
Public Health Nutr., 2014
-
10
Cardiovascular risk factors in a Mexican middle-class urban
population. The Lindavista Study. Baseline data.
Arch Cardiol Mex, 2013
-
11
Socioeconomic status and hypertension.
J Hypertens., 2015
-
13
The prevalence of and risk factors for hypertension in adults
living in Istanbul
Blood Press, 2004
-
14
Social disparities explain differences in hypertension
prevalence, detection and control in Colombia.
J Hypertens, 2016
-
15
Hypertension prevalence and risk factors in a Brazilian urban
population.
Arq Bras Cardiol., 2010
-
16
Prevalência de hipertensão arterial em Adventistas do Sétimo Dia
da capital e do interior paulista.
Arq Bras Cardiol, 2012
-
17
Variáveis biopsicossociais e atitudes frente ao tratamento
influenciam a hipertensão complicada.
Arq Bras Cardiol., 2010
-
18
Prevalência de obesidade abdominal em hipertensos cadastrados em
uma Unidade de Saúde da Família.
Arq Bras Cardiol, 2010
-
14
Social disparities explain differences in hypertension
prevalence, detection and control in Colombia.
J Hypertens, 2016
The Cardiovascular Risk Factor Multiple Evaluation in Latin America study (CARMELA)
conducted in seven capital cities reported that 24.3-46.9% of patients were unaware
of their hypertensive condition, more than half of those with hypertension were
untreated, and only 12.0% were controlled, findings associated with the poor
communication between health staff and the community.19 The average time taken to inform the patient is too
lengthy and information regarding the implementation of healthy lifestyles and the
need to take medicines to have a good control of hypertension and avoid
complications is not well expressed.20
-
19
Hypertension in seven Latin American cities: the Cardiovascular
Risk Factor Multiple Evaluation in Latin America (CARMELA)
study.
J Hypertens, 2010
-
20
Hypertension prevention and control in Latin America and the
Caribbean.
J Clin Hypertens, 2015
Among the 23,578 patients from Latin-America who participated in the Population Urban
and Rural Epidemiology (PURE) study,12 the prevalence of hypertension (defined as values of
systolic blood pressure (SBP) ≥ 140 mmHg and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) ≥ 90
mmHg) was 50.8% in Argentina, 52.6% in Brazil, 46.7% in Chile and 37.5% in Colombia.
Only 57% of the patients knew they had hypertension, 52.8% received treatment, but
only 18.3% had adequate control of their high blood pressure (BP). In the results of
the National Health Survey 2000 conducted in Mexico, the percentage of Mexicans with
hypertension who were unaware of their condition was 61%, only 14.6% of hypertensive
patients were controlled.8 These
findings demonstrated the importance of improving awareness, diagnosis, and adequate
treatment that allows a good control of hypertension (SBP < 140 mmHg).
-
12
Prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension in
rural and urban communities in high-, middle-, and low-income
countries.
JAMA, 2013
-
8
Sugar consumption and global prevalence of obesity and
hypertension: an ecological analysis.
Public Health Nutr., 2014
Hypertension treatment in low income settings is expensive because is a chronic risk
factor that requires life-long medication therapy and most of the hypertensive
patients need on average at least two antihypertensive medications for adequate BP
control.21 The PURE study
demonstrated22 that the use of
cardiovascular medications as drugs to treated hypertension is affected by the
negative impact of a low percentage of availability and affordability of cardio-
vascular disease medicines, especially in LMICs, where the capacity to pay these
class of medications could demand more that the half of the family income. Maybe
these factors can explain the recent report of Mills et al.23 who demonstrated that the age adjusted prevalence
of hypertension increased from 2000 to 2010 in LMIC, whereas control of hypertension
in men decreased and the awareness and treatment increased only slightly.
-
21
Issues in blood pressure control and the potential role of
single-pill combination therapies.
Int J Clin Pract, 2009
-
22
Availability and affordability of cardiovascular disease
medicines and their effect on use in high-income, middle-income, and
low-income countries: an analysis of the PURE study data.
Lancet, 2016
-
23
Global disparities of hypertension prevalence and control
clinical perspective.
Circulation, 2016
Fixed dose combination therapy comes as a possible solution to improve treatment and
control of high blood pressure in LMICs due to a simplify algorithm of treatment and
by increasing adherence. Moreover, the combination of two or more antihypertensive
drugs in one pill acts with a synergistic mechanism reflecting better results
controlling BP levels. This article aims to review the evidence that support this
proposal.
Barriers for hypertension treatment in Latin America
Most of the countries of the Americas have non communicable disease prevention and
control programs aligned with global mandates, with a large emphasis on the control
of hypertension.24 Health policies
aimed to promote lifestyle changes that improve blood pressure levels such as a
healthier diet, low sodium intake, low alcohol intake, increased physical activity
and cessation of smoking have lowered cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) in some wealthy
regions of the world,25,26 but have had low impact in others, especially in
LMIC.27 Moreover, there are
only few successful population-wide hypertension control programs and it has been
shown that behavioral interventions to modify lifestyles are expensive, have low
impact and are not sustainable over time.28 Evidence suggests that education is the most important
aspect of SES affecting hypertension control,14,29-31 but this factor is not easy to improve in a short
time. Modifying lifestyles may be difficult to achieve for some patients, making
necessary the use of multiple pharmacological compounds to improve BP levels. As
reviewed before, in LMICs there are a limited use of antihypertensive medicines
because of their poor availability, a lack of afford- ability, poor prescription and
a lack of patient adherence.11 So,
if we want to reach the 25 × 25 goal of the World Health Organization,32 the call to action of the Lancet
Commission on Hypertension33 and
the 20X20 strategy of the Latin American Society of Hypertension,34 together with programs to
implement changes in life style, we also need to implement programs that allow the
improvement of the prescription of medications to treat hypertension. This therapy
must be of high quality, affordable, available, with simplified indications to the
patients permitting to improve the adherence and the BP control.
-
24
Reducing cardiovascular mortality through prevention and
management of raised blood pressure.
Glob Heart, 2015
-
25
Thirty-five-year trends in cardiovascular risk factors in
Finland.
Int J Epidemiol, 2010
-
26
Can a sustainable community intervention reduce the health gap?
10-Year evaluation of a Swedish community intervention program for the
prevention of cardiovascular disease.
Scand J Public Health., 2001
-
27
Monitoring and surveillance of chronic non-communicable diseases:
progress and capacity in high-burden countries.
Lancet, 2010
-
28
Multiple risk factor interventions for primary prevention of
coronary heart disease.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev., 2006
-
14
Social disparities explain differences in hypertension
prevalence, detection and control in Colombia.
J Hypertens, 2016
-
29
Assessing socioeconomic inequalities of hypertension among women
in Indonesia’s major cities.
J Hum Hypertens, 2015
-
31
Is there any association between blood pressure and education
level? The CroHort study.
Coll Antropol, 2012
-
11
Socioeconomic status and hypertension.
J Hypertens., 2015
-
32
NCD global monitoring frame-work, 2017
-
33
A call to action and a life- course strategy to address the
global burden of raised blood pressure on current and future generations:
the Lancet Commission on hypertension.
Lancet, 2016
-
34
The 20×20 Latin American Society of Hypertension
target.
J Hypertens, 2015
Fixed dose combination therapy for hypertensive treatment
A single dose of antihypertensive medication reduces SBP in average by 8-10 mmHg, but
a largest effect can be achieved by increasing the dose of the medication.35 Several studies have demonstrated
that the combination of two agents from any two classes of antihypertensive drugs
increases the BP reduction significantly more than increasing one agent dose.36 Moreover, there are other
advantages of initiating treatment with combination therapy in patients with high
cardiovascular risk because there is a greater probability of achieving the target
BP, and this lowers the probability of discouraging patient adherence with a
multidrug therapy. Indeed, a survey showed that patients receiving combination
therapy had a lower drop-out rate than patients with monotherapy.37 European guidelines suggested
fixed dose combination therapy over single drug therapy for hyper- tension treatment
due to a higher compliance too.38
The European experts noticed further advantage between physiological and
pharmacological synergies among different classes of agents that may not only
promote a greater BP reduction but also cause fewer side effects than a single
agent.
-
35
Value of low dose combination treatment with blood pressure
lowering drugs: analysis of 354 randomised trials.
BMJ, 2003
-
36
Combination therapy versus monotherapy in reducing blood
pressure: meta- analysis on 11,000 participants from 42
trials.
Am J Med, 2009
-
37
Reduced discontinuation of antihypertensive treatment by two-drug
combination as first step. Evidence from daily life
practice.
J Hypertens, 2010
-
38
2013 ESH/ESC Guidelines for the management of arterial
hypertension.
Blood Press, 2013
The 2013 Latin America Society of Hypertension (LASH) consensus confirmed previous
recommendations about hypertension treatment and highlighted the fact that
diuretics, beta-blockers, calcium antagonists, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE)
inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) are all suitable for the
initiation and maintenance of antihypertensive treatment.39 This consensus favors the use of combinations of
two antihypertensive drugs at fixed doses in a single tablet, because reducing the
number of pills to be taken daily improves adherence, and increases the rate of BP
control.40 This approach is
now facilitated by the availability of different fixed-dose combinations of the same
drugs, which minimizes one of its inconveniences, namely the inability to increase
the dose of one drug independently of the other.39,41
-
39
Latin American consensus on hypertension in patients with
diabetes type 2 and metabolic syndrome.
J Hypertens, 2013
-
40
Safety, and effectiveness of fixed-dose combinations of
antihypertensive agents: a meta-analysis.
Hypertension, 2010
-
39
Latin American consensus on hypertension in patients with
diabetes type 2 and metabolic syndrome.
J Hypertens, 2013
-
41
Hypertension guidelines: is it time to reappraise blood pressure
thresholds and targets?
Hypertension, 2016
Clinical trials with fixed dose combination therapy
There is only indirect data available from randomized trials about fixed dose
combination therapy for management of BP and cardiovascular outcomes. Among the
trials using fixed dose combination therapy for hypertension, three studies compared
two-drug combination in one arm versus one drug more placebo: the ADVANCE trial
compared an ACE inhibitor plus a diuretic with a diuretic with placebo,42 FEVER compared a calcium
antagonist plus a diuretic versus a diuretic plus placebo43 and ACCOMPLISH compared an ACE inhibitor in
combination with either a diuretic or a calcium antagonist.44 In all other trials, treatment was initiated by
monotherapy in either arm and another drug (and some- times more than one drug) was
added in some patients. In some trials, the second drug was chosen by the
investigator among those not used in the other treatment arms, as in the
Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack (ALLHAT)
study.45
-
42
Effects of a fixed combination of perindopril and indapamide on
macrovascular and microvascular outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes
mellitus (the ADVANCE trial): a randomised controlled trial.
Lancet, 2007
-
43
The Felodipine Event Reduction (FEVER) Study: a randomized
long-term placebo-controlled trial in Chinese hypertensive
patients.
J Hypertens, 2005
-
44
Benazepril plus amlodipine or hydrochlorothiazide for
hypertension in high-risk patients.
N Engl J Med., 2008
-
45
The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent
Heart Attack Trial. Major outcomes in high-risk hypertensive patients
randomized to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or calcium channel
blocker vs diuretic: The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to
Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT).
JAMA, 2002
In trials comparing different regimens, all combinations have been used in a larger
or smaller proportion of patients, without major differences in benefits. The only
exceptions are two trials in which a large proportion of patients received either an
angiotensin receptor blocker-diuretic combination or a calcium antagonist-ACE
inhibitor combination,46,47 both of which were superior to a beta-blocker-diuretic
combination in reducing cardiovascular events. However, a beta-blocker-diuretic
combination was as effective as other combinations in several other trials45,48-50 and more effective than placebo in three trials.51-53 However, the beta-blocker-diuretic combination
appears to elicit more cases of new-onset diabetes in susceptible individuals,
compared with other combinations.54
-
46
Prevention of cardiovascular events with an antihypertensive
regimen of amlodipine adding perindopril as required versus atenolol adding
bendroflumethiazide as required, in the Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes
Trial-Blood Pressure Lowering Arm (ASCOT- B).
Lancet, 2005
-
47
Cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in the Losartan
Intervention For End- point reduction in hypertension study (LIFE): a
randomised trial against atenolol.
Lancet, 2002
-
45
The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent
Heart Attack Trial. Major outcomes in high-risk hypertensive patients
randomized to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or calcium channel
blocker vs diuretic: The Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to
Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT).
JAMA, 2002
-
48
Effect of angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibition compared with
conventional therapy on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in
hypertension: the Captopril Prevention Project (CAPPP) randomised
trial.
Lancet, 1999
-
50
Randomised trial of effects of calcium antagonists compared with
diuretics and beta-blockers on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in
hypertension: the Nordic Diltiazem (NORDIL) study.
Lancet, 2000
-
51
Efficacy and safety of cholesterol-lowering treatment:
prospective meta-analysis of data from 90 056 participants in 14 randomised
trials of statins.
Lancet, 2005
-
53
Morbidity and mortality in the Swedish Trial in Old Patients with
Hypertension (STOP- Hypertension).
Lancet, 1991
-
54
New-onset diabetes and anti- hypertensive drugs.
J Hypertens, 2006
The ACCOMPLISH trial directly compared two combinations in all patients,44 it found significant superiority
of an ACE inhibitor-calcium antagonist combination over the ACE inhibitor-diuretic
combination in cardiovascular outcomes despite no BP difference between the two
arms. These unexpected results deserve to be repeated, because trials comparing a
calcium antagonist-based therapy with a diuretic-based therapy have never shown
superiority of the calcium antagonist. Nonetheless, the possibility that ACCOMPLISH
results may be due to a more effective reduction of central BP by the association of
a renin-angiotensin system blocker with a calcium antagonist deserves to be
investigated. All these trials proved the effectiveness of fixed dose combination in
hypertension therapy and thus in cardiovascular outcomes. Some of these studies
results are summarized in Table 1.
-
44
Benazepril plus amlodipine or hydrochlorothiazide for
hypertension in high-risk patients.
N Engl J Med., 2008
Table 1.Major drug combinations used in trials of antihypertensive
treatment.
| Clinical trial |
Intervention |
Patients |
SBP diff (mmHg) |
Adherence |
Outcomes |
|
ADVANCE trial
42
|
Fixed combination of Perindopril and indapamide or
matching placebo |
Patients with diabetes |
−5.6 |
73% |
−9% micro/macrovascular events
(p=0.04) 18% reduction in the risk of death
from cardiovascular disease |
|
FEVER
43
|
Low-dose hydrochlorothiazide plus low dose
felodipine extended release compared to only low-dose
hydrochlorothiazide |
Hypertensive patients |
−4.2 |
85.9% |
−27% cardiovascular events
(p<0.001) |
|
ACCOMPLISH
44
|
Benazepril plus amlodipine or benazepril plus
hydrochlorothiazide |
Hypertensive patients with risk factors |
−1 |
Benazepril/amlodipine: 71.2%
Benazepril-hydrochlorothiazide: 68.8% |
−21% cardiovascular events
(p<0.001) |
|
ALLHAT study
45
|
Chlorthalidone, 12.5-25mg/d; amlodipine 2.5-10mg/d;
or lisinopril |
Hypertensive patients with risk factors |
−2/−1 |
Adherence decreased over time from about 92% at 1
year to 84% to 87% at 5 years in all 3 treatment groups |
Not significant in cardiovascular events |
SBP diff: systolic blood pressure difference.
Evidence has shown that any of the drug classes blocking the rennin-angiotensin
system (ACEi and ARBs) combined with a dihydropyridine CCB, or combined with a
thiazide diuretic, should be considered the preferred combination to initiate
antihypertensive treatment for most patients, particularly in fixed-dose
combination. Therefore, the selection of the individual components in each
combination may be based mainly on the capacity of obtaining the lowest prizes of
the original molecules in the different countries of Latin America.
In the review of Bautista et al.,55
it was calculated that if in Latin-America a fixed dose combination therapy were
given, the lifetime risk of cardiovascular events could be reduced by 15 percent in
those in the high-risk group (those with a ten-year risk of cardiovascular disease
greater than or equal to 15) or to those age fifty-five or older.
-
55
A polypill aimed at preventing cardiovascular disease could prove
highly cost-effective for use in Latin America.
Health Aff, 2013
Recently, the results of the HOPE-3 study, in which Colombia participated including
more than 1.500 patients, demonstrated that a combination therapy with a fixed dose
of 16 mg/day of candesartan and 12.5 mg/of hydrochlorothiazide administered to
individuals of intermediate-risk without CVD, with a SBP >144 mmHg (average 154
mmHg), produced an average decrease of 6/3 mmHg of SBP/DBP that was associated with
a significant reduction of 27% in the relative risk of the composite outcome of
cardiovascular death and non-fatal myocardial infarction and stroke (Fig. 1).56
-
56
Blood-pressure lowering in intermediate-risk persons without
cardiovascular disease.
N Engl J Med, 2016
In participants with BP in the highest tertile who also received rosuvastatin (10
mg/day) and the two antihypertensive medications, there was an increase in the
relative
Figure 1
Reduction of cardiovascular outcomes in the HOPE 3 study of
combination therapy in the overall group and in tertile 3 of systolic
blood pressure (>143 mmHg). HCTZ: hydrochlorothiazide, RRR: relative
risk reduction, T3: tertile 3 of systolic blood pressure.
risk reduction to 40%.57 Treatment
adherence in HOPE-3 was high: 88.2% were taking the prescribed regimen at 1 year,
83.6% at 3 years, 75.0% at 5 years, and 76.8% at the end of the trial. Moreover,
HOPE-3 confirmed the results reported by the Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes
Trial,58 showing a potential
synergy between lipid-lowering and blood pressure lowering in the management of
CVDs. Importantly, the HOPE-3 study demonstrated that the beneficial effects in
reducing the cardiovascular events of a fixed dose of two antihypertensive drugs is
observed only in people with a SBP>144 mmHg, but not in people with lower levels
of SBP.56 The study also showed
that cardiovascular protection is achieved when SBP falls below 140 mmHg. The HOPE-3
results suggest that combination therapy with statin and two antihypertensive agents
must be indicated for primary prevention for those individuals with a systolic blood
pressure >140 mmHg, while the statin alone must be used in those individuals
with- out high systolic BP because the protective effects of statin were independent
of the levels of BP.59
-
57
Blood-pressure and cholesterol lowering in persons without
cardiovascular disease.
N Engl J Med, 2016
-
58
Potential synergy between lipid-lowering and
blood-pressure-lowering in the Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes
Trial.
Eur Heart J., 2006
-
56
Blood-pressure lowering in intermediate-risk persons without
cardiovascular disease.
N Engl J Med, 2016
-
59
The polypill in the prevention of cardiovascular diseases: key
concepts, current status, challenges, and future directions.
Circulation, 2010
These results demonstrated for the first time that a combination of a statin with an
ARB and a diuretic at low doses reduces LDL cholesterol, BP and cardiovascular
events in patients with moderate risk and without cardiovascular disease. Moreover,
the high adherence of these patients to the treatment support the proposal for the
use of a combination of hypotensive drugs plus statin as an effective cardiovascular
primary prevention strategy. However, the HOPE 3 study did not use the 3 medications
in a single pill,59 but currently
several clinical trials are running to evaluate the efficacy of a polypill in
primary and secondary prevention of CVDs.
-
59
The polypill in the prevention of cardiovascular diseases: key
concepts, current status, challenges, and future directions.
Circulation, 2010
All these studies proved that fixed dose combination therapy can control BP with an
improvement of cardiovascular outcomes, the compliance was increased and the
medications were well tolerated with few adverse events and non-relevant clinical
changes in laboratory values. Thus, fixed dose combination could be a cheap solution
improving the availability of medications, using generic medication of high quality
for hypertension treatment in LMICs.
Fixed dose combination therapy cost
The mortality from CVDs has decreased in developed countries but it is increasing in
LMIC.60,61 It is estimated that more than
half of the reduction in mortality may be attributable to medical therapy when
medications are accessible and affordable.22 Unfortunately, according to the World Health
Organization in LMICs remains a low availability of effective pharmacological
treatments in patients with hypertension and CVDs.62 The cost of cardiovascular drugs used in secondary
prevention becomes a greater challenge within the health system, since a one-month
supply of generic drugs is equivalent to 1.5-18.4 days of the minimum income in
LMICs.63
-
60
Global atlas on cardiovascular disease prevention and
control
Geneva: Published by the World Health Organization in collaboration with
the World Heart Federation and the World Stroke Organization, 2011
-
61
National Re-survey of Arterial Hypertension (RENAHTA). Mexican
consolidation of the cardiovascular risk factors. National follow-up
cohort.
Arch Cardiol Mex, 2005
-
22
Availability and affordability of cardiovascular disease
medicines and their effect on use in high-income, middle-income, and
low-income countries: an analysis of the PURE study data.
Lancet, 2016
-
62
WHO study on Prevention of REcurrences of Myocardial Infarction
and StrokE (WHO-PREMISE)
Bull World Health Organ, 2005
-
63
The availability and affordability of selected essential
medicines for chronicl diseases in six low- and middle-income
countries.
Bull World Health Organ, 2007
Inadequate health care systems are also implicated in poor hypertension control,5 and the low level of government
investment in healthcare systems is associated with the inadequate use of
cardiovascular drugs in individuals with clear indications for them, including
antihypertensive medications.64 In
most Latin-American countries, more than 50% of the population have difficulties in
accessing health-care and to cover expenses related to health.65 We have identified that in Colombia the principal
barriers to control of hypertension are related to the cost of transport to health
care facilities and the copayment of medications.66
-
5
Global burden of hypertension: analysis of worldwide
data.
Lancet, 2005
-
64
Use of secondary prevention drugs for cardiovascular disease in
the community in high-income, middle-income, and low-income countries (the
PURE Study): a prospective epidemiological survey.
Lancet, 2011
-
65
Latin American guidelines on hypertension*.
J Hypertens, 2009
-
66
Patients’ knowledge, attitudes, behaviour and health care
experiences on the prevention, detection, management and control of
hypertension in Colombia: a qualitative study.
PLOS ONE., 2015
In a meta-analysis in which was compared fixed dose combination therapy versus free
drug combination therapy, it was found that the annual cost in 2009 for hypertension
or cardio-vascular related cost were lower in patients with fixed dose combination
therapy.67 Fixed dose
combination therapy has shown also to decrease the number of visits to the hospital,
to decrease emergency department visits and hospitalizations,68 and with an increased adherence to treatment.
Furthermore, low adherence is correlated with a higher risk of cardiovascular events
and CVDs, resulting in greater healthcare costs. Fixed combination therapy comes as
a solution to reach an adequate compliance in hypertensive patients. In Latin
America it has been estimated that fixed dose combination therapy would be
cost-effective even in countries with low gross national income,55 making affordable the treatment
for hypertension. However, more studies are needed in Latin-America proving the
benefits of fixed dose combination in BP control, CVDs prevention and healthcare
cost.
-
67
Single-pill vs free-equivalent combination therapies for
hypertension: a meta-analysis of health care costs and
adherence.
J Clin Hypertens., 2011
-
68
Medication utilization patterns and hypertension-related
expenditures among patients who were switched from fixed-dose to
free-combination antihypertensive therapy.
P&T, 2008
-
55
A polypill aimed at preventing cardiovascular disease could prove
highly cost-effective for use in Latin America.
Health Aff, 2013
Problems of fixed dose combination therapy
Although fixed dose combination therapy is an effective, easy and attractive
hypertensive way of treatment, the strategy cannot be applied to all the patients
because it lacks of flexibility and certain individuals may present with
contraindications or adverse effects for one of the components.69 Also with a fixed dose combination therapy some
patients may be exposed to unnecessary therapy. Another problem with fixed dose
combination are the patents for the components of a single pill with multiple
antihypertensive medications. In a study conducted to assess the availability of
free patent cardiovascular drugs, it was found that from 48 cardiovascular
medication in Canada and United States, only 19 drugs (40%) were totally patent
free.70 This can be a strong
barrier for the marketing and worldwide distribution of an antihypertensive fixed
dose combination. Although some generics companies, are already producing generic
medication of fixed dose combination based on the requirements of the regulatory
authorities, providing a temporary solution. Another solution is that the
pharmaceutical companies who own the original patents bring the pills with fixed
dose combination to the marked at an affordable price. In conclusion, there is an
increasing interest in the concept of prescribing a fixed dose of cardiovascular
drugs such as antihypertensive medications. This is particularly interestedly in
LMICs, where the burden of hypertension and cardiovascular diseases is high,
resources for diagnostic are limited, and inexpensive and standardized treatments
are more likely to be taken up in clinical practice than individualized therapeutic
concepts. Fixed dose combination is effective controlling BP, because the
administration of a single pill improves adherence, reduces CVDs and therefore
decreases healthcare cost. However, there is the need to evaluate fixed dose
combination in well-designed programs aimed to improve hypertension prevalence and
cardiovascular prevention in Latin-America.
-
69
Fixed combination drugs for cardiovascular disease risk
reduction: regulatory approach.
Am J Cardiol, 2005
-
70
Could patents interfere with the development of a cardiovascular
polypill?
J Transl Med, 2016
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