Antihypertensive medications are used extensively in children despite a paucity of randomized, placebo-controlled trials. This study was among the first randomized, controlled pediatric antihypertensive medication trials, in which the combination drug bisoprolol fumarate/hydrochlorothiazide (B/HT) was compared with placebo. The study comprised a 2-week single-blind placebo screening period, a 6-week double-blind dose titration period, a 4-week double-blind dose maintenance period, and a 2-week double-blind dose-tapering period. One hundred and forty subjects were enrolled to achieve 94 randomized subjects treated either with B/HT ( n=62) or placebo ( n=32). B/HT induced significant reductions compared with placebo for average sitting systolic blood pressure (SiSBP) (9.3 vs. 4.9 mmHg, P<0.05) and sitting diastolic blood pressure (SiDBP) (7.2 vs. 2.7 mmHg, P<0.05). The placebo-subtracted BP reductions were greater in younger children and those with more-severe baseline hypertension. The percentage of subjects with BP less than the 90th percentile at study completion was 45% for B/HT and 34% for placebo ( P=NS). Although the study demonstrated that B/HT reduced BP safely compared with placebo, the large placebo effect and failure of most subjects to achieve target BP control make it uncertain whether B/HT is appropriate first-line therapy for pediatric hypertension, particularly in adolescents with mild-to-moderate BP elevation.
These data suggest that SBP hypertension should be part of inclusion criteria to increase enrollment and reduce the rate of screening termination, and that 1-week placebo screening is necessary and sufficient to minimize inclusion of transiently hypertensive subjects.
This study examined the effect of gender and body weight on the pharmacokinetic properties of the Nicotine Transdermal System (NTS) (Nicoderm). This NTS was applied for 24 hours to 13 normal-sized men, 13 women, and 13 obese men, all of whom were smokers who had abstained from cigarettes for the previous 24 hours. Pharmacokinetic parameters were determined during a single application of the system. The mean nicotine maximal plasma concentration (Cmax) and area under the curve (AUC) values for women did not differ significantly from those for normal-sized men. Nicotine Cmax and AUC values, however, were significantly lower in obese compared with normal-sized men; nicotine AUC was strongly correlated to body weight and body mass index. Mean apparent nicotine elimination rate constant values were not significantly different between normal-sized and obese men, but the apparent elimination rate constant value was significantly higher in women. The possible clinical significance of the differences in nicotine AUC values with body weight is discussed.
An open-label, randomized, crossover study determined nicotine pharmacokinetics at steady state of a new Nicotine Transdermal System in 24 healthy adult male smokers. Three doses were each administered for 5 days: 7, 14 and 21 mg nicotine per day. Plasma nicotine concentrations reached steady state by the third day and were sustained throughout the 24-hour application periods. Mean steady-state nicotine and cotinine area under the curve (AUC0-24), maximum plasma concentration (Cmax), minimum plasma concentration (Cmin), average plasma concentration (Cavg), and total urinary cotinine were proportional to the dose of nicotine released in vitro from Nicotine Transdermal System. Time to reach peak concentration (tmax), half-life (t1/2), relative degree of fluctuation (DF) in steady-state plasma nicotine and cotinine concentrations, and renal cotinine clearance were similar for all three dosages, indicating linear pharmacokinetics and no change in nicotine metabolism with increasing dose. Findings from a second study also reflect the linear dose relationship for this Nicotine Transdermal System within the 7 to 21 mg/day dosage range. Bioequivalence based on the confidence interval test was demonstrated for a single application of Nicotine Transdermal System 21 mg/day and the same total dosage achieved by combined administration of Nicotine Transdermal System 7 mg/day plus Nicotine Transdermal System 14 mg/day, although there were small statistical differences. This Nicotine Transdermal System has a well-defined pharmacokinetic profile, with sustained plasma nicotine concentrations, and nicotine pharmacokinetics that are independent of the dose of this Nicotine Transdermal System.
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