Oral iron(III) polymaltose complex offers at least equivalent efficacy and a superior safety profile compared to ferrous sulfate for the treatment of iron-deficiency anemia during pregnancy.
Every two of three patients of this sample of Andean countries reached adequate control after 6 months of combined antihypertensive treatment with amlodipine/losartan.
Objective:To evaluate the efficacy and safety of valsartan (V) or chlorthalidone (C)
monotherapy in comparison with a fixed combination of valsartan and
chlorthalidone (V + C).Methods:This 12-week multicenter randomized three-arm open-label study randomly
allocated 72 patients to V or C as monotherapy or a combination of V + C.
The aim was to measure changes in office systolic blood pressure (SBP) and
diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and in 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure
monitoring (ABPM) from baseline to week 12, in addition to medication
tolerability.Results:The proportion of patients achieving target BP in office at week 12 was not
statistically different for the three groups. However, comparisons of
daytime and nighttime 24-hour ABPM values from baseline to week 12 revealed
significant differences in nighttime mean SBP for the three groups, due to a
significantly greater reduction in the values in patients assigned to the V
+ C group (−14.7 vs. −8.7 vs. −10.7, P = .042, V+C; V; C,
respectively). Although patients assigned to the V + C group also had
greater nighttime reduction in mean DBP values compared with those in the
other groups, this difference was not statistically significant. The
incidence of adverse events did not differ significantly.Conclusion:In patients with hypertension treated with V, C, and both medications
combined, the fixed combination of V + C provided a significantly greater
reduction of late night to early morning BP values when interventions were
assessed with 24-hour ABPM.Trial registration:clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT.01850160, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01850160
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