Efficacy of antihypertensive treatment for target organ protection in patients with masked hypertension (ANTI-MASK): a multicentre, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Jian-Feng Huang(Ruijin Hospital), Dong‐Yan Zhang(Ruijin Hospital), De‐Wei An(Ruijin Hospital), Ming‐Xuan Li(Ruijin Hospital), Changyuan Liu(Ruijin Hospital), Yingqing Feng(Guangdong Provincial People's Hospital), Qidong Zheng(Yuxian People's Hospital), Xin Chen(Ruijin Hospital), Jan A. Staessen(Ruijin Hospital), Ji‐Guang Wang(Ruijin Hospital), Yan Li(Ruijin Hospital), Yan Li(Ruijin Hospital), Jian-Feng Huang(Ruijin Hospital), Dong‐Yan Zhang(Ruijin Hospital), De‐Wei An(Ruijin Hospital), Ming‐Xuan Li(Ruijin Hospital), Yiqing Zhang, Ji‐Guang Wang(Ruijin Hospital), Xin Chen(Ruijin Hospital), Changyuan Liu(Ruijin Hospital), Gui-Li Chang, Zhe Hu, Yingqing Feng(Guangdong Provincial People's Hospital), Xida Li, Can Liu(Ruijin Hospital), Jiayi Huang(Ruijin Hospital), Yu‐Ling Yu, Qidong Zheng(Yuxian People's Hospital), Yiyun Wang, Xuening Zhang, Jing Yu, Ruixin Ma, Heng-Xia Liu, Xiaoping Chen(Ruijin Hospital), Qingtao Meng, Zhipeng Zhang, Yu Dou, Meiyu Zhu, Wen-Juan Wang, Li-Li Zhu, Min Zhang, Yi-Nong Jiang, Yan Lü, Wei Yu, Xiaoling Xu, Qiuyan Dai, Yufeng Zhu, Huijie Zhang, Yu Zhang, Jinshun Zhang, Peili Bu, Lingxin Liu, Jianjun Mu, Jingtao Xu, Yue‐Yuan Liao, Hao Guo, Xinyue Liang, Jan A. Staessen(Ruijin Hospital)
EClinicalMedicine
July 18, 2024
Cited by 11Open Access
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Abstract

Background: Masked hypertension is associated with target organ damage (TOD) and adverse health outcomes, but whether antihypertensive treatment improves TOD in patients with masked hypertension is unproven. Methods: In this multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial at 15 Chinese hospitals, untreated outpatients aged 30-70 years with an office blood pressure (BP) of <140/<90 mm Hg and 24-h, daytime or nighttime ambulatory BP of ≥130/≥80, ≥135/≥85, or ≥120/≥70 mm Hg were enrolled. Patients had ≥1 sign of TOD: electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV) ≥1400 cm/s, or urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR) ≥3.5 mg/mmol in women and ≥2.5 mg/mmol in men. Exclusion criteria included secondary hypertension, diabetic nephropathy, serum creatinine ≥176.8 μmol/L, and cardiovascular disease within 6 months of screening. After stratification for centre, sex and the presence of nighttime hypertension, eligible patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive antihypertensive treatment or placebo. Patients and investigators were masked to group assignment. Active treatment consisted of allisartan starting at 80 mg/day, to be increased to 160 mg/day at month 2, and to be combined with amlodipine 2.5 mg/day at month 4, if the ambulatory BP remained uncontrolled. Matching placebos were used likewise in the control group. The primary endpoint was the improvement of TOD, defined as normalisation of baPWV, ACR or LVH or a ≥20% reduction in baPWV or ACR over the 48-week follow-up. The intention-to-treat analysis included all randomised patients, the per-protocol analysis patients who fully adhered to the protocol, and the safety analysis all patients who received at least one dose of the study medication. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02893358. Findings: Between February 14, 2017, and October 31, 2020, 320 patients (43.1% women; mean age ± SD 53.7 ± 9.7 years) were enrolled. Baseline office and 24-h BP averaged 130 ± 6.0/81 ± 5.9 mm Hg and 136 ± 8.6/84 ± 6.1 mm Hg, and the prevalence of elevated baPWV, ACR and LVH were 97.5%, 12.5%, and 7.8%, respectively. The 24-h BP decreased on average (±SE) by 10.1 ± 0.9/6.4 ± 0.5 mm Hg in 153 patients on active treatment and by 1.3 ± 0.9/1.0 ± 0.5 mm Hg in 167 patients on placebo. Improvement of TOD occurred in 79 patients randomised to active treatment and in 49 patients on placebo: 51.6% (95% CI 43.7%, 59.5%) versus 29.3% (22.1, 36.5%; p < 0.0001). Per-protocol and subgroup analyses were confirmatory. Adverse events were generally mild and occurred in 38 (25.3%) and 43 (26.4%) patients randomised to active treatment and placebo, respectively (p = 0.83). Interpretation: Our results suggest that antihypertensive treatment improves TOD in patients with masked hypertension, highlighting the need of treatment. However, the long-term benefit in preventing cardiovascular complications still needs to be established. Funding: Salubris China.


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