Objective: Modern pharmaceutical strategies in arterial hypertension, as well as in other fields, are directed toward two major apparently contrasting objectives: 1) sim- plification of treatment by grouping multiple drugs into single fixed-combination pharmaceutical units (including “polypill”) to improve patient adherence, and 2: personalization of therapy to tailor treatments according to specific individual aspects including pharmacogenomics. The combined fulfillment of these objectives would conceivably entail the unre- alistic development of a very great variety of fixed-combination polypills, each different for drug composition and dosage. An alternative view that could combine the need for both therapy simplification and personalization may be the concept of a flexible-combination polypill. Design and Methods: In order to test this approach, we are devising a preliminary study aimed to assess the feasibility and efficacy of shifting individual patients’ treatment from multiple daily administration (multi-administration) to a single once-a-day administration (mono-administration) of the same drugs. After approval of Ethical Committee, a cross-over randomized study will be carried out for 24 weeks in 52 well controlled non complicated hypertensive outpatients under multiple therapy with at least one hypotensive drug and/or a statin and/or aspirin. Each subject will remain for an 8 weeks period on multi-administration and for another 8 weeks period on mono-administration of the same therapy; the two peri- ods will be separated by 8 weeks to avoid a carry-over effect and their sequence will be randomized.

A proposal for the idea of a flexible-combination polypill in arterial hypertension

FOMMEI, ENZA;
2015-01-01

Abstract

Objective: Modern pharmaceutical strategies in arterial hypertension, as well as in other fields, are directed toward two major apparently contrasting objectives: 1) sim- plification of treatment by grouping multiple drugs into single fixed-combination pharmaceutical units (including “polypill”) to improve patient adherence, and 2: personalization of therapy to tailor treatments according to specific individual aspects including pharmacogenomics. The combined fulfillment of these objectives would conceivably entail the unre- alistic development of a very great variety of fixed-combination polypills, each different for drug composition and dosage. An alternative view that could combine the need for both therapy simplification and personalization may be the concept of a flexible-combination polypill. Design and Methods: In order to test this approach, we are devising a preliminary study aimed to assess the feasibility and efficacy of shifting individual patients’ treatment from multiple daily administration (multi-administration) to a single once-a-day administration (mono-administration) of the same drugs. After approval of Ethical Committee, a cross-over randomized study will be carried out for 24 weeks in 52 well controlled non complicated hypertensive outpatients under multiple therapy with at least one hypotensive drug and/or a statin and/or aspirin. Each subject will remain for an 8 weeks period on multi-administration and for another 8 weeks period on mono-administration of the same therapy; the two peri- ods will be separated by 8 weeks to avoid a carry-over effect and their sequence will be randomized.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/757732
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