UK doctors slow to utilize
combination therapy for hypertension (Published 24th December 2004)
According to new Datamonitor research, the majority of hypertension
sufferers are not fully controlled on a single antihypertensive therapy. With
many patients requiring a combination of two or three drugs from different
classes to adequately lower their blood pressure, not enough doctors are
recognizing the importance of multiple drug administration.
Datamonitor
estimates that over one in four people globally suffer from hypertension, yet
some doctors (especially those in the UK) have yet to come to appreciate the
importance of using multiple drugs to control the condition in their
patients.
Small difference, big effect
Clinical trials on
hypertension patients continue to show that even small differences in blood
pressure can have a significant effect on mortality outcome. Doctors have been
accused of being slow to appreciate this fact, with too many patients still
being inadequately treated with a single drug in combination with lifestyle
modifications such as reduced salt intake and weight loss.
Now more
physicians are starting to appreciate the importance of treating hypertension
all the way to target blood pressure, and patients are increasingly taking
drugs from more than one class.
It is estimated that there are currently
almost 17 million Britons with hypertension (high blood pressure), a chronic
disease that if not treated, may lead to other cardiovascular disorders like
heart attacks and strokes. The prevalence of hypertension will continue to
increase due to the aging nature of the world's population. However, the rising
incidence of type II diabetes and the obesity epidemic will continue to drive
up treatment rates even within other age groups.
UK
trailing
The UK has also trailed the US, Japan and other European
nations in the use of fixed-dose combination treatments, where more than one
active ingredient is combined in a single pill or capsule. Doctors in the UK
have traditionally been very averse to using fixed-dose combinations, generally
due to the teaching in medical schools that fixed doses prevent the ability of
the physician to accurately adjust the doses of individual components or detect
problems caused by a single component of a combination.
This attitude
may be set to change in the near future however, as teaching methods are
brought more in line with those around the world, which acknowledge the
increased compliance and efficacy of combined treatments. This change will make
the UK a fast-growing market for combination products over the next 10 years,
as a newer generation of physicians educated on the importance of blood
pressure control but without the aversion to fixed-dose combinations joins the
prescribing ranks.
There is currently no consensus gold-standard
antihypertensive treatment, and no single drug has displayed significantly
superior overall efficacy compared to other classes. Drugs from a number of
different classes with distinct methods of action are used in lowering blood
pressure, including: angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARB), angiotensin
converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and calcium channel blockers (CCB). These
three largest antihypertensive drug classes now account for over three quarters
of the total market value. The fastest growing class of antihypertensive drug
is the ARBs, which have rapidly drawn level with the second highest selling
class of antihypertensive, the ACE inhibitors. However both currently trail the
CCB class.
Growing market
The antihypertensive market was
worth $30 billion in 2003 (an increase of $3.5 billion on the previous year)
and as a result of the increasing market size and the continuing switch from
the use of older drugs to more costly newer versions, the antihypertensives
market is expected to increase in value by $6.5 billion over the next 10 years.
More patients are also being treated along new guidelines, which focus
on overall cardiovascular risk, and thus the prescribing of a number of classes
of drugs for each patient, which obviously also increases sales. Although
the sales of antihypertensive treatments continue to grow, the market is set
for a period of consolidation as patent expiries and the emergence of cheaper
generic versions drive down costs of the biggest selling branded
drugs.
The US market accounts for 48% of the global value and is the
largest and most mature market, showing the lowest market growth rate of 4.5%
year on year during the period 2000-03, compared to a global average of
7.5%.
Pfizer's Norvasc, a CCB also known as amlodipine, is the
world's biggest selling antihypertensive and the fourth highest value
pharmaceutical in the world. It alone accounts for almost 15% of the
antihypertensive sales market, with over $4.3 billion in global sales in 2003.
However Norvasc looks set to lose the market leading position it has held for
over five years as it suffers patent expiry throughout the main markets over
the coming years, culminating with the patent expiry in the US during 2007.
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