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(Hypertension. 2006;48:374.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Articles |
From the University of Ottawa Heart Institute (F.H.H.L.), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (M.A.P., C.E.N.), Bethesda, Md; Rush-Presbyterian-St. Lukes Medical Center (H.R.B.), Chicago, Ill; Memphis Veterans Affairs Medical Center (W.C.C.), Tenn; University of Texas Health Science Center School of Public Health (B.R.D., L.M.S.), Houston; Albert Einstein College of Medicine (M.H.A.), Bronx, NY; Bronx Veterans Affairs Medical Center (S.A.A.), NY; Charleston Veterans Affairs Medical Center (J.N.B.), SC; New Jersey Medical School (A.B.C.), Newark; Marshfield Clinic (R.D.), Marshfield, Wis; Carl T. Hayden Veterans Affairs Medical Center (J.V.F.), Phoenix, Ariz; Berman Center for Outcomes and Clinical Research (R.H.G.), Minneapolis, Minn; Los Angeles CountyUniversity of Southern California Medical Center (L.J.H.); Fargo Veterans Affairs Medical Center (S.Z.A.J.), ND; University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and Veterans Affairs Medical Center (U.T.), Oklahoma City; Tulane University Health Sciences Center (P.K.W.), New Orleans, La; University Hospitals of Cleveland (J.T.W.), Ohio.
Correspondence to Frans H.H. Leenen, Hypertension Unit, University of Ottawa Heart Institute, H-360, 40 Ruskin St, Ottawa, Ontario K1Y 4W7, Canada. E-mail fleenen{at}ottawaheart.ca
| Abstract |
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Key Words: antihypertensive therapy hypertension, detection and control calcium channel blockers angiotensin-converting enzyme cardiovascular diseases stroke heart failure
| Introduction |
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1-blocker doxazosin in preventing several major cardiovascular outcomes.3 More effective BP control in the chlorthalidone arm likely contributed to some of the differences in outcomes.2,3 Before and during active clinical follow-up in ALLHAT, reports emerged on beneficial effects of ACE inhibitors, such as improved survival and reduced morbidity in patients with HF, left ventricular dysfunction, or CHD, or those at high risk for CHD.46 On the other hand, in the early mid-1990s, several studies reported unfavorable cardiovascular outcomes with CCBs in patients with CHD or with hypertension and diabetes.7,8 In addition, concerns were raised regarding the overall safety of chronic use of CCBs, specifically, increased incidence of cancer9,10 and gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding.11,12
The protocol of ALLHAT prespecified 3 comparisons: amlodipine, doxazosin, or lisinopril compared with chlorthalidone. The database from ALLHAT also provides a unique opportunity to compare the long-term relative safety and outcomes of ACE inhibitor- and CCB-based regimens in a randomized double-blind clinical trial setting, although this was not a prespecified comparison.
The purpose of this analysis, therefore, is to compare cardiovascular and other outcomes among 18 102 men and women with high-risk hypertension randomly assigned to the ACE inhibitor lisinopril or the dihydropyridine (DHP) CCB amlodipine. Prespecified subgroups were examined with special emphasis on outcomes in blacks versus nonblacks because of previously reported interactions for several major outcomes with lisinopril.2
| Methods |
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55 years, with untreated systolic (140 to 180 mm Hg) and/or diastolic (90 to 110 mm Hg) hypertension, or treated hypertension (
160/100 mm Hg on 1 to 2 antihypertensive drugs at visit 1) with
1 additional risk factor for CHD.13,14 All of the participants gave written informed consent, and all of the centers obtained institutional review board approval. The BP goal for all participants was <140/90 mm Hg, to be achieved by titrating the dose of assigned study drug (step 1) and adding open-label step 2 (atenolol, clonidine, or reserpine) or step 3 (hydralazine) agents when necessary. Other drugs, including low doses of open-label step 1 drug classes, were permitted along with blinded drugs if clinically indicated. Step 1 drugs were encapsulated and identical in appearance. Dosages were 2.5, 5, and 10 mg per day for amlodipine and 10, 20, and 40 mg per day for lisinopril. After initial monthly titration visits, participants were seen every 3 months in year 1 and every 4 months thereafter. An ECG and blood samples for creatinine, glucose, potassium, and total cholesterol were analyzed centrally at baseline and at annual (potassium) or biennial (ECG, fasting glucose, creatinine, and total cholesterol) visits thereafter.
The primary outcome was a composite of fatal CHD or nonfatal MI.13 Four major prespecified secondary outcomes were: (1) all-cause mortality, (2) fatal and nonfatal stroke, (3) combined CHD (primary outcome+coronary revascularization+hospitalized angina), and (4) combined CVD (combined CHD+stroke+nonhospitalized treated angina+HF [fatal, hospitalized, or treated nonhospitalized]+peripheral arterial disease [PAD]). Individual components of the combined outcomes were also examined. Other prespecified secondary outcomes included end-stage renal disease ([ESRD] dialysis, renal transplant, or renal death), cancer, hospitalization for GI bleeding, angioedema, and ECG-left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). Standardized procedures were used for reporting and validation of study end points.13,15 Prespecified subgroups included: (1) men versus women, (2) participants <65 versus
65 years, (3)black versus nonblack participants, and (4) diabetic versus nondiabetic patients. Post hoc subgroups included gender subgroups by race and the presence or absence of CHD at baseline. The latter was ascertained at the randomization visit as "known prior MI, angina, primary cardiac arrest, coronary artery stenosis >50%, reversible perfusion defect, or major coronary revascularization procedure."
Statistical Methods
Data were analyzed according to participants randomized treatment assignments (intent-to-treat analysis). Baseline characteristics and intermediate outcomes were compared across the 2 treatment groups using the z test for continuous covariates and contingency table analysis for categorical data. Cumulative event rates were calculated using the KaplanMeier method. Hazard ratios (relative risks [RRs]) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were obtained from the Cox proportional hazards regression model.16 The Cox proportional hazards regression model assumption was examined using loglog plots and testing a treatmenttime (time-dependent) interaction term; if it was violated, the RR estimate from a 2-by-2 table was used.16 Heterogeneity of effects in the subgroups was examined by testing for treatmentcovariate interaction with the Cox proportional hazards regression model by using P<0.05. In this post hoc comparison of lisinopril versus amlodipine, it is noteworthy that with a CHD event rate combined across arms of (796+798)/(9054+9048)=0.08806, the power to detect a 20% reduction for one arm relative to another is well over 99% if no multiple comparison adjustment is used, and it is &99% if the same adjustment that was used for comparisons with chlorthalidone in the main trial analysis2 is used for comparisons among active arms, as suggested by Proschan.17
| Results |
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Intermediate Outcomes
BP
Mean seated BP at randomization was 146/84 mm Hg in both groups. Changes in BP during follow-up by race and gender are shown in Figure 1 and average follow-up BPs in Table 1. During follow-up, BP decreased progressively, but the average follow-up BP remained higher by 1.5/1.1 mm Hg in the lisinopril compared with the amlodipine arm. Among prespecified subgroups, in both male and female nonblacks, the 2 treatments rapidly decreased BP, remaining somewhat higher in the lisinopril arm (0.0/0.5 mm Hg in men and 1.3/0.9 mm Hg in women). In contrast, in blacks, the BP decreased less for both treatment arms than in nonblacks and remained higher in the lisinopril arm compared with the amlodipine arm: by 4.3/1.8 mm Hg at year 2 and 2.4/1.1 mm Hg at year 4 in the black women for an average follow-up BP difference of 3.9/2.1 mm Hg and 2.6/1.7 mm Hg at year 2 and 0.8/1.0 mm Hg at year 4 in the black men for an average follow-up BP difference of 2.7/1.6 mm Hg (Figure 1 and Table 1). The 2 treatments showed only minor differences (
1 mm Hg higher in the lisinopril arm) in the 2 age subgroups, in nondiabetics, and in the patients with CHD at baseline. In diabetic subjects, the systolic BP remained higher by 1.4 to 2.0 mm Hg in the lisinopril arm.
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In the amlodipine group, 87.6% of participants were taking amlodipine or another CCB at year 1 and 80.4% at year 5.2 Persistence on allocated treatment was significantly lower in the lisinopril group (82.4% and 72.6% at years 1 and 5, respectively).2 In the subgroups, women and blacks in the lisinopril arm showed the lowest (71% and 70%) persistence on allocated treatment. The diabetic participants showed similar persistence (78% and 77%) for the 2 treatments. The average number of antihypertensive medications (Figure 1, below diastolic BP plots) at years 2 and 4 were 1.5 and 1.7 in the amlodipine arm and 1.7 and 1.9 in the lisinopril arm (P<0.001 lisinopril versus amlodipine).
Blood Glucose, LVH, and Glomerular Filtration Rate
Changes in fasting cholesterol and potassium showed only minor differences between the 2 treatment arms (Table 2). Among individuals classified as normoglycemic at baseline, 11.5% and 13% progressed into in the impaired fasting glucose range (6.1 to 6.9 mmol/L), and another 9.4% and 10.4% progressed to new-onset diabetes by year 4, not significantly different by treatment. However, among those wwith impaired fasting glucose at baseline, during follow-up, more patients on amlodipine versus lisinopril stayed in this range, and more progressed to diabetes.
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ECG-LVH at baseline was present in 5% of participants. Over 4 years of follow-up, ECG-LVH tended to decrease with no difference between the 2 treatment arms. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) decreased over 4 years of follow-up, significantly more so in the lisinopril versus amlodipine arm.
Primary and Secondary Outcomes
For the primary outcome of nonfatal MI and fatal CHD and the secondary outcomes of all-cause mortality and combined CHD, event rates were similar for the 2 treatment arms (Table 3 and Figure 2). The predefined subgroups also showed no significant differences for CHD (Figure 3). For cause-specific mortality (data not shown), rates also did not differ, with 6-year rates per 100 persons for cardiovascular death of 8.5 in both arms and for noncardiovascular death of 8.0 per 100 persons in the amlodipine arm compared with 8.6 per 100 persons in the lisinopril arm.
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For 2 major secondary outcomes, stroke and combined CVD, the 2 treatment arms did differ. Stroke rates were significantly higher (RR=1.23; 95% CI, 1.08 to 1.41) in the lisinopril arm. This treatment effect was consistent across subgroups by age and diabetic status but not by race and gender (Figures 3 and 4
). Both male and female blacks showed increased stroke rates on lisinopril compared with amlodipine (Figure 4): +52% in male and +48% in female participants. Female nonblacks also suffered more strokes on lisinopril versus amlodipine (+41%) but not male nonblacks (10%), and nonblacks showed a significant (P=0.02) interaction for treatment and gender (Figure 4). However, the 3-way interaction term included in the full model (treatmentgenderrace) is nonsignificant (P=0.112). With only the 2-way interaction terms included in the full model, treatmentgender is not significant (P=0.110), whereas treatmentrace remains significant (P=0.025). Combined CVD was modestly higher in the lisinopril arm (RR=1.06; 95% CI, 1.00 to 1.12; P=0.047). Across subgroups, no significant interactions were found (Figure 3). Individual components of the combined CVD outcome showed a variable pattern. Both all HF and hospitalized/fatal HF were significantly lower in the lisinopril arm across subgroups (Figure 3). This difference did not emerge until 3 years of follow-up when the rates started to diverge (Figure 2). In contrast, hospitalized angina rates and rates for PAD were marginally (P<0.05) higher in the lisinopril arm. Coronary revascularization rates did not differ. These patterns were consistent across subgroups (data not shown).
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Table 4 shows the major outcomes in patients with versus without CHD at baseline. In both subgroups, stroke rates were increased (by 31% [P=0.05] and 21% [P=0.04]) on lisinopril versus amlodipine. In the subgroup with CHD at baseline, the 2 treatment arms showed no significant differences in rates for the other outcomes. In the subgroup without CHD at baseline, the lisinopril arm showed significantly higher rates for angina and PAD, whereas the amlodipine arm showed higher rates for HF. However, there were no significant interactions between treatment (lisinopril versus amlodipine) and CHD history (yes versus no) for any of these outcomes.
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To assess possible differences in the severity of the strokes, MIs and the HF between the 2 treatment arms, case fatality rates were evaluated. Cumulative mortality was high after all 3 events, reaching &40% after 5 years, but did not differ for the 2 treatment arms (data not shown).
Other Secondary Outcomes
Six-year rates for all cancers were 10.0±0.4 and 9.9±0.4 in the amlodipine and lisinopril treatment groups, not significantly different for the whole group or any of the subgroups. Rates for ESRD were also similar (2.1±0.2 versus 2.0±0.2) with no obvious differences in the subgroups. In contrast, 6-year rates of hospitalization for GI bleeding were significantly higher on lisinopril versus amlodipine (9.6±0.4 versus 8.0±0.4; P=0.004), consistent across the subgroups (Figure 3). Use of aspirin at baseline did not influence the difference in nonblacks, but in blacks on aspirin, the impact of lisinopril tended (P=0.187 for interaction) to be more marked (10.3 versus 6.8%; P=0.03) than in blacks not on aspirin (8.7% versus 7.6%; P=0.23). Angioedema was reported in 38 patients in the lisinopril arm versus 3 in the amlodipine arm (P<0.001). Of these, 23 versus 2 occurred in blacks and 15 versus 1 in nonblacks (both P<0.001).
| Discussion |
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In contrast, the major prespecified secondary end point of stroke did show significant differences between the 2 treatment arms. Across the major prespecified subgroups, this difference in stroke rates was particularly evident in blacks and in women. Compared with amlodipine, the RR of lisinopril for stroke in blacks was 1.51 (95% CI, 1.22 to 1.86) compared with 1.07 (95% CI, 0.89 to 1.28) in nonblacks and in women 1.45 (95% CI, 1.17 to 1.79) compared with 1.10 (95% CI, 0.92 to 1.31) in men. This observed benefit of amlodipine over lisinopril for stroke can be attributed at least in part to its better BP-lowering effect. This difference in BP was most pronounced in black women. A meta-analysis of 61 observational studies suggests that an average systolic BP difference of 4 mm Hg could account for about a 10% reduction in stroke mortality.19 However, the slope for BP versus stroke may be more steep in the high-risk blacks studied in ALLHAT. Chinese hypertensive patients show a steeper relationship between BP and stroke rates compared with Western populations.20 The Felodipine Event Reduction (FEVER) Study enrolled Chinese patients, and an average BP difference of 4.2/2.1 mm Hg was associated with a 27% difference in stroke rates,21 considering also the 95% CI (0.60 to 0.89) consistent with the findings in blacks in ALLHAT. On the other hand, in nonblack women, BP may not explain the higher (+37%) stroke rates on lisinopril versus amlodipine, because the average systolic BP between the 2 treatment arms differed by only 1.3 mm Hg. The beneficial findings in stroke for amlodipine over lisinopril are consistent with a trend toward a CCBACE inhibitor difference for stroke in the BPLTTC meta-analysis.18 Considering also the results from the monotherapy arm in Perindopril PROtection aGainst REcurrent Stroke Study (PROGRESS),22 the ALLHAT findings raise the possibility that ACE inhibitors somehow prevent strokes less effectively. However, one should keep in mind that occasional BP measurements obtained in the office do not necessarily reflect the actual BP load over time. Inclusion of 24-hour BP or central aortic BP monitoring in clinical trials may provide more accurate data.
Combined CVD is a composite end point that includes components rather dissimilar in terms of clinical importance. Some of the components were discussed above. HF, a clinically important component of the CVD composite outcome with high case-fatality rate, showed a statistically significant greater risk with amlodipine versus lisinopril. This difference was not apparent until after the third year of follow-up. The delayed separation of the treatment HF curves is similar to the results reported in Valsartan Antihypertensive Long-term Use Evaluation (VALUE) for the comparison of the angiotensin receptor blockers valsartan and amlodipine.23 On the other hand, hospitalized angina and PAD, both also components of the CVD composite, were statistically, but marginally, different in favor of amlodipine over lisinopril.
Based on results from placebo-controlled trials such as Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation Study6 or European Trial on Reduction of Cardiac Events with Perindopril in Stable Coronary Artery Disease (EUROPA),24 it is commonly assumed that in patients with CHD, treatment with ACE inhibitors results in improved outcome beyond what may be expected from the BP decrease. In a post hoc analysis of ALLHAT, no significant interactions were noted for the 2 treatments for patients with versus without CHD at baseline. In both HOPE and EUROPA, modest but clinically important (see above) differences in BP between the ACE inhibitors and placebo arms were present. In ALLHAT, at equivalent BP control, no evidence for specific benefits by ACE inhibitorbased treatment was found in the patients with CHD. A reassessment of the evidence for special effects of ACE inhibitors in patients with CHD seems overdue.
Despite a persistently higher GFR in the CCB group, there was no difference between amlodipine and lisinopril for the prespecified outcome of ESRD. In the ALLHAT cohort, 17.8% of the participants had moderate-to-severe reduction in GFR.25 The benefits of ACE inhibition in diabetic and other proteinuric renal impairment are well known.26 However, in an older population, multiple mechanisms may contribute to a low GFR, and the extent of proteinuric renal disease in ALLHAT was not assessed. Moreover, differences in BP control may have offset renal benefits of ACE inhibitor therapy.
There were 975 GI bleeding end points reported among participants assigned to the lisinopril and amlodipine groups, with no differences in the use of aspirin at baseline. However, an (&20%) excess of GI bleeding was observed among individuals assigned to lisinopril compared with amlodipine. This finding is at odds with the observations by Pahor et al11 and Zuccala et al.12 Other investigators27,28 have reported observations contrary to those of Pahor et al11 and Zuccala et al12 as well. Fogari et al29 suggest that plasma fibrinogen levels are significantly decreased by treatment with lisinopril, providing a plausible mechanism to explain our observation.
There were a total of 41 reported incident cases of angioedema, with 38 (0.42%) in the lisinopril group and 3 (0.03%) in the amlodipine group. This serious and potentially fatal adverse drug reaction is well known to be associated with the use of ACE inhibitors. In blacks, the rate was 0.72% in the lisinopril group versus 0.26% in nonblacks. One plausible explanation for the excess angioedema in blacks compared with nonblacks may be because of racial differences in the kallikreinkinin system, which, in blacks, results in greater sensitivity to ACE inhibitorinduced increases in bradykinin.30
The strength of this study is that the observations reported here are from a randomized group comparison using prospective clinical information on &83 292 patient years of follow-up. The total number of events observed in each outcome category were substantially greater than has been reported in similar comparisons, such as Captopril Prevention Project (CAPPP)31 and Swedish Trial in Old Patients-2 (STOP-2),32 enabling, therefore, the detection of clinically meaningful differences in the outcome categories of interest. The large sample size represents multiple races, ethnicities, locations, and types of clinics, making the findings reported here quite robust and making this as pure an effectiveness study as could be conducted.
Certain limitations in the comparison warrant discussion. First, the primary hypotheses of ALLHAT were based on comparisons between the diuretic and the 3 newer classes of antihypertensive drugs. However, a head-to-head comparison of any of the other arms in the trial is still valid, involving a sample size greater than has been used in similar head-to-head comparisons.18,31 Second, equivalent BP control was not achieved in several major prespecified subgroups, primarily because of insufficient BP response to ACE inhibitorbased therapy in blacks. It is possible that, in blacks, in the absence of a diuretic, the second-step drugs allowed in ALLHAT do not combine well with an ACE inhibitor. In ALLHAT, nonblacks and particularly blacks randomized to amlodipine also had a greater adherence to assigned treatment and needed fewer medications to reach BP treatment goal than those randomly assigned to lisinopril. Overall, the CCB-based treatment proved, therefore, to be superior for BP lowering compared with ACE inhibitorbased treatment.
In conclusion, HF was the only secondary outcome for which the ACE inhibitor showed a superior effect over the CCB. In contrast, for stroke and several more "minor" outcomes (PAD, hospitalized angina, GI bleeding, and angioedema), the CCB was superior to the ACE inhibitor. For male and female blacks, less effective BP control by the ACE inhibitorbased regimen may play a significant role in the higher stroke rates, but this is less likely for female nonblacks. Because there were differences in opposite directions (mainly stroke and HF), the drug choice in a given patient should depend on how the clinician and patient assess the absolute risks and the importance of reducing those risks.33
Perspectives
The long-term relative safety and efficacy of CCBs as a class have been the subject of many reports in the literature and discussions in regulatory and policy circles and in the lay media. The results that we have presented here highlight the importance of conducting randomized clinical trials, such as ALLHAT. Observational studies are an important method of evidence development to generate hypotheses, which can then be addressed with clinical trials. Researchers, clinicians and others must be cautious in the interpretation and dissemination of the findings from observational studies of drugs, lest otherwise good therapies be lost. One should also consider that premature claims of "dangers" of a particular drug (class) in the press may also jeopardize recruitment and retention of patients in ongoing clinical trials studying the drug (class), as was the case for ALLHAT.
| Acknowledgments |
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This study was supported by contract NO1-HC-35130 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. The ALLHAT investigators acknowledge contributions of study medications supplied by Pfizer Inc (amlodipine), AstraZeneca (atenolol and lisinopril), and Bristol-Myers Squibb (pravastatin) and financial support provided by Pfizer Inc.
Disclosures
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute sponsored the study and was involved in all aspects other than direct operations of the study centers. This included collection, analysis, and interpretation of the data plus the decision to submit the article for publication. Pfizer Inc, AstraZeneca, and Bristol-Myers Squibb had no role in the design and conduct of the study; the collection, analysis, and interpretation of the data; or the preparation or approval of the article. The following conflicts of interest are disclosed: Abbott: W.C.C. (honoraria, research grant), J.N.B. (speakers bureau, honoraria), J.V.F. (speakers bureau, honoraria); Astra-Zeneca: C.E.N. (current employer), W.C.C. (research grant), J.V.F. (research grant), U.T. (speakers bureau, honoraria); Aventis: H.R.B. (speakers bureau, consultant/advisory board), W.C.C. (research grant), J.V.F. (speakers bureau, honoraria); Bristol-Myers Squibb: F.H.H.L. (ownership interest), H.R.B. (speakers bureau, consultant/advisory board), W.C.C. (consultant,/advisory board), M.H.A. (speakers bureau), S.A.A. (consultant,/advisory board), J.T.W. (speakers bureau, honoraria); Boehringer-Ingelheim: H.R.B. (speakers bureau), W.C.C. (honoraria), A.B.C. (speakers bureau, honoraria); Biovail: W.C.C. (honoraria), J.T.W. (speakers bureau); CV Therapeutics: H.R.B. (honoraria), U.T. (consultant/advisory board), J.T.W. (speakers bureau, honoraria); First Horizon: W.C.C. (consultant/advisory board); Forest: W.C.C. (honoraria, consultant/advisory board); Glaxo-Smith Kline: B.R.D. (consultant/advisory board), J.T.W. (research grant); Johnson & Johnson: F.H.H.L. (ownership interest); Kos: W.C.C. (research grant); Merck: F.H.H.L. (ownership interest), W.C.C. (research grant), B.R.D. (consultant/advisory board), M.H.A. (speakers bureau, honoraria, consultant/advisory board), S.A.A. (speakers bureau), A.B.C. (speakers bureau, honoraria), R.H.G. (research grant, speakers bureau, honoraria), U.T. (speakers bureau); MSD: H.R.B. (consultant/advisory board); Novartis: H.R.B. (speakers bureau, expert witness, consultant/advisory board), W.C.C. (research grant, consultant/advisory board), S.A.A. (research grant, consultant/advisory board), J.N.B. (research grant), R.H.G. (speakers bureau, honoraria), U.T. (honoraria), J.T.W. (research grant, honoraria, speakers bureau, consultant/advisory board); Pfizer: F.H.H.L. (research grant, honoraria, consultant/advisory board), H.R.B. (research grant, speakers bureau, consultant/advisory board), W.C.C. (honoraria, consultant/advisory board), J.N.B. (speakers bureau, honoraria), J.V.F.(research grant, speakers bureau, honoraria), R.H.G.(research grant, speakers bureau, honoraria, consultant/advisory board), U.T. (speakers bureau, honoraria, consultant/advisory board), J.T.W (speakers bureau, honoraria); Reddy: W.C.C.(consultant/advisory board); Rudin Foundation: M.H.A. (research grant); Sankyo: H.R.B. (consultant/advisory board), W.C.C. (honoraria), J.N.B. (speakers bureau, honoraria); Sanofi-Synthelabo: H.R.B. (speakers bureau, consultant/advisory board), W.C.C. (consultant/advisory board), S.A.A. (speakers bureau), J.T.W. (consultant/advisory board); Schering-Plough: F.H.H.L. (ownership interest); R.H.G. (research grant, speakers bureau, honoraria); Takeda: B.R.D. (consultant/advisory board); and VA: J.V.F. (research grant). The remaining authors report no conflicts.
| Footnotes |
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A list of the ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group members has been published previously.2
Received February 20, 2006; first decision March 13, 2006; accepted May 31, 2006.
| References |
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