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Get Free AccessObjective To investigate the reasons for withdrawal from double-blind randomized trials, and the reasons for changing treatment within a randomized therapeutic group. Design The Syst-Eur trial, in which 4695 older patients with systolic hypertension were randomized to active or placebo treatment. Methods The reasons for withdrawal from the trial were examined, both for patient-initiated and investigator-initiated withdrawals. In addition, the reasons for stopping the first-line treatment (nitrendipine), the second-line treatments (enalapril and hydrochlorothiazide) and the corresponding placebos, were determined. Results A total of 135 patients (6%) were withdrawn by the investigators from placebo treatment because their blood pressure was too high, and, similarly, 36 (1.6%) through patient initiation. The corresponding results for the actively treated patients were 14 (0.6%) and 7 (0.3%). Very few patients were withdrawn from the trial because of the adverse effects of treatment. However, 39 (4%) stopped taking active nitrendipine because of ankle oedema, compared with 4 (0.5%) on placebo. Similarly, 28 versus three stopped due to flushing. Forty-one (10%) stopped taking enalapril because of cough, against eight (2%) for enalapril placebo. In all, 15.0% stopped active nitrendipine, 20.2% enalapril and 6.3% hydrochlorothiazide, versus placebo 7.1, 9.1 and 5.1%. Conclusions The numbers withdrawn from the trial for adverse treatment consequences were small in comparison to the cardiovascular benefits. Nevertheless the numbers stopping individual treatments were higher than expected.
Christopher J. Bulpitt, Nigel Beckett, Astrid Fletcher, Lutgarde Thijs, Jan A. Staessen, Dan L. Dumitraşcu, Françoise Forette, Gastone Leonetti, Choudomir Nachev, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Robert Fagard (2002). Withdrawal from treatment in the Syst-Eur Trial. Journal of Hypertension, 20(2), pp. 339-346, DOI: 10.1097/00004872-200202000-00026.
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Type
Article
Year
2002
Authors
11
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Journal of Hypertension
DOI
10.1097/00004872-200202000-00026
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