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Clinical Trial
. 2015 Feb 21:13:24.
doi: 10.1186/s12955-015-0216-6.

Health-related quality of life impact of a triple combination of olmesartan medoxomil, amlodipine besylate and hydrochlorotiazide in subjects with hypertension

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Health-related quality of life impact of a triple combination of olmesartan medoxomil, amlodipine besylate and hydrochlorotiazide in subjects with hypertension

Pedro Marques da Silva et al. Health Qual Life Outcomes. .

Abstract

Background: A post-hoc analysis was performed on the data from a 54 weeks phase III study (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00923091) to measure changes in the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of 2,690 patients aged ≥18 with moderate-to-severe hypertension who received one of six doses of olmesartan/amlodipine/hydrochlorothiazide (OLM/AML/HCTZ), using the MINICHAL and EQ-5D instruments.

Methods: Descriptive statistics were used to assess blood pressure and HRQoL scores over the study period. Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was used to identify those factors that could possibly have influenced HRQoL. Linear regression was used to assess the relationship between changes in blood pressure and HRQoL scores.

Results: Patients' baseline MINICHAL mood and somatic domains scores were 5.5 and 2.6. Over the study period HRQoL improved as both MINICHAL scores decreased by 31-33%. Patients' baseline EQ-5D index and VAS scores were 0.9 and 73.4 respectively, increasing by 6% and 12% over the study period. Patients' QALY gain over the 54 weeks study period was estimated to be 0.029 QALYs. The ANCOVA showed that changes in patients' HRQoL was likely to have been influenced by patients' achievement of blood pressure control, the amount of concomitant medication and patients' last used dosage strength of antihypertensive. Linear regression showed that blood pressure improvement may have been associated with improved HRQoL.

Conclusions: This study showed that OLM/AML/HCTZ reduced blood pressure and significantly increased blood pressure control whilst improving patients' HRQoL. Achieving blood pressure control, amount of concomitant medication and dosage strength of antihypertensive impacted on patients' HRQoL.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Mean MINICHAL scores per patient at different times from the start of antihypertensive treatment. Not all patients completed all HRQoL instruments at each time point.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Mean EQ-5D scores per patient at different times from the start of antihypertensive treatment. Not all patients completed all HRQoL instruments at each time point.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Percentages of patients reporting problems across each EQ-5D index dimension at baseline and after 54 weeks of treatment. Data was missing from 10% of patients at baseline and 1% of patients at week 54.

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