Caro JJ, Jackson J, Speckman J, Salas M, Raggio G
Compliance as a function of initial choice of antihypertensive drug
12th Annual ASH Meeting
Am J Hypertens (Apr) 10:141A 1997

Antihypertensive therapy is complicated by the fact that many patients are not compliant, thus reducing the real effectiveness of treatment.  

This study was designed to determine if the choice of initial antihypertensive agent is a determinant of compliance. All outpatient prescriptions (over 3 million) for antihypertensive drugs filled in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan over a 5 year period were examined.  Patients with conditions likely to influence the choice of antihypertensive agent were excluded.  

Of the newly diagnosed patients (27,364), 41% stopped treatment during the study period.  The likelihood of non-compliance was significantly related to the drug utilized. Compliance at the start of the fifth year was 54% for diuretics, 63% for beta-blockers, 64% for calcium blockers, and 71% for ACE inhibitors.  The percentage of patients remaining on the initial agent at the start of the fifth year were: diuretic 19%, beta- blocker 16%, calcium blocker 20%, ACE inhibitor 26%.  These differences remained significant after controlling for patient characteristics, frequency of pretreatment physician visits, hospitalizations and non-antihypertensive medications. The authors conclude that patients are likely to be more compliant with ACE inhibitors than with diuretics or beta blockers.

Comment: There has been recent interest in using diuretics and beta-blockers as first line therapy because of proven efficacy and decreased cost.  This study raises the concern that decreased patient tolerance/compliance may offset these advantages. (David J. Leehey, M.D., Loyola University at Chicago)

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12th Annual ASH Meeting
H: Drug therapy : Compliance
H: Drug therapy : Chronotherapeutics