Norton G R, Woodiwiss A J, Hartford C, Trifunovic B, Middlemost S, Lee A, Allen M J
Department of Physiology, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Am J Hypertens. 1999 Jun;12(6):563-71. doi: 10.1016/s0895-7061(99)00009-6.
Our objective was to evaluate the safety and antihypertensive efficacy of sampatrilat, a novel dual inhibitor of both angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and neutral endopeptidase (NEP), in subjects poorly responsive to ACE inhibitor monotherapy. The ability of sampatrilat (50 to 100 mg daily) (n = 28) to lower blood pressure was compared with that of the ACE inhibitor lisinopril (10 to 20 mg daily) (n = 30) using a double-blind, randomized, parallel group study design over a 56-day treatment period in black hypertensives. Changes in systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure were determined using repeated ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) monitoring. Both sampatrilat and lisinopril decreased plasma ACE concentrations after 28 and 56 days. The decrease in plasma ACE concentrations (U/L) was greater after lisinopril (-9.33 +/- 0.52) as compared with sampatrilat (-6.31 +/- 0.70) (P = .0001) therapy. Lisinopril, but not sampatrilat, increased plasma renin activity. Lisinopril produced a transient decrease in mean 24-h ABP (mm Hg) at 28 days (SBP = -9.0 +/- 2.3, DBP = -5.7 +/- 1.3; P < .01), which returned to pretreatment values by 56 days of therapy. Alternatively, sampatrilat produced a sustained decrease in mean ABP over the 56-day treatment period (day 28: SBP = -7.3 +/- 1.8, DBP = -5.2 +/- 1.2; P < .01: day 56: SBP = -7.8 +/- 1.5; DBP = -5.2 +/- 0.95; P < 0.01) with a greater treatment effect on DBP than that of lisinopril at day 56 (P = .05). Treatment-emergent adverse events were noted to be similar between both treatment groups. We conclude that the antihypertensive actions of ACE/NEP inhibitor monotherapy in black subjects offers a novel therapeutic approach to patients otherwise resistant to the sustained antihypertensive actions of ACE inhibitor monotherapy.
我们的目标是评估新型血管紧张素转换酶(ACE)和中性内肽酶(NEP)双重抑制剂sampatrilat对ACE抑制剂单药治疗反应不佳的受试者的安全性和降压疗效。采用双盲、随机、平行组研究设计,在56天的治疗期内,比较sampatrilat(每日50至100毫克)(n = 28)与ACE抑制剂赖诺普利(每日10至20毫克)(n = 30)降低血压的能力,研究对象为黑人高血压患者。使用重复动态血压(ABP)监测来确定收缩压(SBP)和舒张压(DBP)的变化。sampatrilat和赖诺普利在治疗28天和56天后均降低了血浆ACE浓度。与sampatrilat(-6.31±0.70)相比,赖诺普利治疗后血浆ACE浓度下降幅度更大(-9.33±0.52)(P = 0.0001)。赖诺普利增加了血浆肾素活性,而sampatrilat没有。赖诺普利在治疗28天时使平均24小时ABP(毫米汞柱)出现短暂下降(SBP = -9.0±2.3,DBP = -5.7±1.3;P < 0.01),但在治疗56天时恢复到治疗前水平。相比之下,sampatrilat在56天的治疗期内使平均ABP持续下降(第28天:SBP = -7.3±1.8,DBP = -5.2±1.2;P < 0.01:第56天:SBP = -7.8±1.5;DBP = -5.2±0.95;P < 0.01),且在第56天时对DBP的治疗效果优于赖诺普利(P = 0.05)。两个治疗组的治疗中出现的不良事件相似。我们得出结论,ACE/NEP抑制剂单药治疗对黑人受试者的降压作用为那些对ACE抑制剂单药治疗的持续降压作用有抗性的患者提供了一种新的治疗方法。