Dual endothelin antagonist aprocitentan for resistant hypertension (PRECISION): a multicentre, blinded, randomised, parallel-group, phase 3 trial.
Resistant hypertension is associated with increased cardiovascular risk. The endothelin pathway has been implicated in the pathogenesis of hypertension, but it is currently not targeted therapeutically, thereby leaving this relevant pathophysiological pathway unopposed with currently available drugs. The aim of the study was to assess the blood pressure lowering efficacy of the dual endothelin antagonist aprocitentan in patients with resistant hypertension.
PRECISION was a multicentre, blinded, randomised, parallel-group, phase 3 study, which was done in hospitals or research centres in Europe, North America, Asia, and Australia. Patients were eligible for randomisation if their sitting systolic blood pressure was 140 mm Hg or higher despite taking standardised background therapy consisting of three antihypertensive drugs, including a diuretic. The study consisted of three sequential parts: part 1 was the 4-week double-blind, randomised, and placebo-controlled part, in which patients received aprocitentan 12·5 mg, aprocitentan 25 mg, or placebo in a 1:1:1 ratio; part 2 was a 32-week single (patient)-blind part, in which all patients received aprocitentan 25 mg; and part 3 was a 12-week double-blind, randomised, and placebo-controlled withdrawal part, in which patients were re-randomised to aprocitentan 25 mg or placebo in a 1:1 ratio. The primary and key secondary endpoints were changes in unattended office systolic blood pressure from baseline to week 4 and from withdrawal baseline to week 40, respectively. Secondary endpoints included 24-h ambulatory blood pressure changes. The study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03541174.
The PRECISION study was done from June 18, 2018, to April 25, 2022. 1965 individuals were screened and 730 were randomly assigned. Of these 730 patients, 704 (96%) completed part 1 of the study; of these, 613 (87%) completed part 2 and, of these, 577 (94%) completed part 3 of the study. The least square mean (SE) change in office systolic blood pressure at 4 weeks was -15·3 (SE 0·9) mm Hg for aprocitentan 12·5 mg, -15·2 (0·9) mm Hg for aprocitentan 25 mg, and -11·5 (0·9) mm Hg for placebo, for a difference versus placebo of -3·8 (1·3) mm Hg (97·5% CI -6·8 to -0·8, p=0·0042) and -3·7 (1·3) mm Hg (-6·7 to -0·8; p=0·0046), respectively. The respective difference for 24 h ambulatory systolic blood pressure was -4·2 mm Hg (95% CI -6·2 to -2·1) and -5·9 mm Hg (-7·9 to -3·8). After 4 weeks of withdrawal, office systolic blood pressure significantly increased with placebo versus aprocitentan (5·8 mm Hg, 95% CI 3·7 to 7·9, p<0·0001). The most frequent adverse event was mild-to-moderate oedema or fluid retention, occurring in 9%, 18%, and 2% for patients receiving aprocitentan 12·5 mg, 25 mg, and placebo, during the 4-week double-blind part, respectively. This event led to discontinuation in seven patients treated with aprocitentan. During the trial, a total of 11 treatment-emergent deaths occurred, none of which were regarded by the investigators to be related to study treatment.
In patients with resistant hypertension, aprocitentan was well tolerated and superior to placebo in lowering blood pressure at week 4 with a sustained effect at week 40.
Idorsia Pharmaceuticals and Janssen Biotech.
Schlaich MP
,Bellet M
,Weber MA
,Danaietash P
,Bakris GL
,Flack JM
,Dreier RF
,Sassi-Sayadi M
,Haskell LP
,Narkiewicz K
,Wang JG
,PRECISION investigators
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Aprocitentan, A Dual Endothelin Receptor Antagonist Under Development for the Treatment of Resistant Hypertension.
Aprocitentan (ACT-132577) is an orally active, dual endothelin-1 (ET-1) receptor antagonist that prevents the binding of ET-1 to both ETA/ETB receptors. It is an active metabolite of macitentan (obtained by oxidative depropylation), an orphan drug used for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension. Aprocitentan is highly bound to plasma proteins and is eliminated in both urine and feces. It is well tolerated across all doses (up to 600 mg with single dose and 100 mg once a day at multiple doses). Its pharmacokinetic profile shows a half-life of 44 h, fitting a once-daily dosing regimen with plasma ET-1 concentrations (reflecting ET receptor antagonism), significantly increasing with doses ≥ 25 mg. Only minor differences in exposure between healthy females and males, healthy elderly and adult subjects, fed and fasted conditions, and renal function have been observed. Aprocitentan in patients with resistant hypertension is currently under investigation in the PRECISION phase III trial (ClinicalTrials identifier: NCT03541174). Nonetheless, results of pre-clinical data and studies in humans support the potential role of aprocitentan in this clinical setting. The absolute blood pressure (BP) reductions with aprocitentan are in the ranges established as a surrogate for reduction in cardiovascular morbidity in hypertension. Significant changes in BP with aprocitentan are observed within 14 days, and its BP-lowering effects have also been documented with ambulatory BP monitoring. Finally, aprocitentan enhances the BP-lowering effects of other antihypertensive drugs, including renin-angiotensin-system blockers. In conclusion, aprocitentan ameliorates the effects of ET-1 and could potentially reduce BP and provide broader cardiovascular protection in patients with resistant hypertension. Available data support the hypothesis that this new agent could expand our antihypertensive arsenal in resistant hypertension, making aprocitentan an attractive candidate for further large-scale trials.
Angeli F
,Verdecchia P
,Reboldi G
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