To develop a recommendation that is practical and implementable by end-users, the evidence-to-decision frameworks of PICO questions 6, 7 and 8 (see Annex 4) were used to develop one recommendation.
Evidence and rationale
The GDG developed three PICO questions to address: monotherapy vs combination therapy as a first-line treatment for HTN, a comparison of the various combination therapies, and a comparison of single-pill combinations vs multiple-pill combinations. These three questions were addressed separately in the evidence profiles and evidence-to-decision framework, but eventually led to one recommendation. The evidence base consisted of six, seven and eight systematic reviews respectively (Web Annex A).
Evidence summaries demonstrate several comparisons of combination therapy to monotherapy. Data on mortality, MACE and other hard endpoints were imprecise. Combination therapy lowered SBP more than monotherapy did (e.g. standard dose CCB combined with ARB vs high dose CCB; or ACE and ARB combination vs either drug class alone) and had fewer adverse events (standard dose CCB combined with ARB vs high dose CCB). Data on cardiovascular outcomes are limited from randomized trials. A large nonrandomized study from Italy (125 635 patients, age 40–85 years) evaluated those who started antihypertensive treatment with one drug vs a two-drug single-pill or free combination. Propensity score adjusted analysis suggests that an initial two-drug single-pill or free combination was associated with significant reductions in the risk of death (20%, 11–28%) and hospitalization for cardiovascular events (16%, 10–21%) compared with initial monotherapy (41). Combination antihypertensive therapy may be associated with fewer side-effects due to use of lower doses of each drug.
A comparison of the various combination therapies suggested overall effectiveness of combination therapies that contained the three drug classes of diuretic, ACE/ARB and CCB. Other desirable effects of a combination therapy are improved treatment adherence and persistence. However, many of these studies used a single-pill combination, thereby confounding the question of monotherapy vs combination therapy. A meta-analysis compared adherence and persistence between groups of patients taking antihypertensives as single-pill combinations vs free-equivalent components based on 12 retrospective database studies. Adherence, measured as the mean difference in medication possession ratio, was 8–14% higher with a single-pill combination. Persistence was also twice as likely (42). A second systematic review demonstrated that simplifying dosing regimens results in significant improvements in medication adherence, ranging from 6% to 20% (43).
The desirable effects of greater adherence/persistence, improved BP control, and potentially improved clinical outcomes of combinations of the three classes of antihypertensive therapy compared outweigh the undesirable effects such as side-effects, particularly when provided as a single-pill combination. The overall certainty in evidence was low across the outcomes of interest, noting that evidence was limited in terms of hard endpoints.
Evidence-to-decision considerations
In terms of stakeholder values and preferences about monotherapy vs combination therapy or the various combination therapies, data were minimal. No important variability in values was expected with regard to the critical outcomes. A systematic review demonstrated that simplifying dosing regimens results in significant improvements in medication adherence, ranging from 6% to 20% (43). Considering the comparative ease of using a single-pill combination over multiple-pill combinations, and the anticipated impact on adherence and persistence, the GDG judged that from a patient perspective the single-pill option will be favoured by most.
Combination therapy is accompanied initially by a moderate increase in resource requirements, such as procurement, supply chain, and direct medication costs. Some combinations may be expensive, or not allow for exact dosing of both agents. However, the net benefit of improved BP control and reduction of major events associated with the hypertensive process compared to the increase in cost is large. BP control is also likely to be achieved sooner with combination therapy. Many modelling studies that evaluated combination vs monotherapy used a fixed dose (thereby not truly addressing the question). One model from Japan used data from randomized trials and compared low-dose combination therapy of controlled-release nifedipine (20 mg/day) plus candesartan (8 mg/day) vs titrated monotherapy of candesartan. In the combination therapy group, higher efficacy and lower incremental treatment cost (dominance) were observed when compared to the monotherapy group (44). A retrospective cohort study that used the 2008–2012 BlueCross BlueShield of Texas claims suggests that mean annual drug utilization costs were highest for a single-pill combination strategy. However, disease-related inpatient services utilization costs were lower compared with the up-titration strategy, which may offset initial costs (45). In one model from China, olmesartan/amlodipine as a single pill was dominant, compared with olmesartan and amlodipine free combination and valsartan/amlodipine single-pill combination (46). In a second study, there was a reduction in the cost of therapy of 33%, with a saving of USD 19 per patient/month after switching from free combination to the single-pill combination (47).
Since single-pill combination therapy increases medication adherence and persistence, which could improve HTN control rates and decrease major clinical events, the impact on health equities is expected to be favourable. In terms of acceptability, combination therapy, including in a single-pill form, can initially be met with scepticism among stakeholders, including health care providers. However, this initial scepticism may improve once BP control improves. Despite effective, safe, affordable, and available pharmacological antihypertensive agents, the control rates of HTN are dismal worldwide, and over the last 5 to 10 years have been decreasing in some HICs, and in LMICS, in tandem with increasing major cardiovascular events. Over 30% of the world population has HTN and only 13.8% of cases are considered controlled (48). One major reason for this poor level of control (one in seven) is that most patients only receive monotherapy, whereas empirical evidence demonstrates that most patients require two drugs or more to achieve optimal and sustained control (44, 46, 49, 50, 51, 52). The rationale for recommending a combination therapy, particularly in a single-pill approach, is based on the following considerations:
most individuals with HTN will eventually require two or more antihypertensive agents to achieve BP control;
the combination of two agents from complementary classes yields greater BP-reduction efficacy (at the least additive of the two chosen agents);
lower doses of each agent are needed, which results in a reduction of side-effects and the fact that use of complementary classes of antihypertensive agents may mitigate the side-effects of each agent;
adherence and persistence are increased; and
simplified logistics can lead to fewer stock-outs and a reduced pharmacy inventory (
53,
54).
In terms of feasibility, a study from India compared prices of antihypertensive single-pill combinations and equivalent single-agent pills in the private health care sector. The results suggested that manufacturers have priced the combination higher than the price of its components. These data demonstrate that the price of combination pills could be lowered to match the combined price of the component, and that manufacturing costs and market forces do not present a barrier to the implementation of antihypertensive combination pills (55). Thus, the intervention is likely feasible to implement. The GDG acknowledged some challenges to single-pill combinations, such as limited flexibility in modifying the doses of individual components, and difficulty in attributing side-effects to one of its components (56).
Although randomized trials addressing this issue are not abundant, and those available are not sufficiently large or conducted for a long enough period to clearly address differences in major clinical events, the initial combination treatment approach has been in place for over 15 years in large health systems, such as the Kaiser Permanente system in the United States (57) and is a major component of the WHO Global HEARTS Programme and the PAHO HEARTS in the Americas Initiative (53). Recently, combination antihypertensive medications in a single pill have been added to the WHO Essential Medicines List (49). This approach has demonstrated general acceptance by government, public, and private stakeholders and is demonstrating success in increasing HTN control rates worldwide.