Abstract

BackgroundHypertension is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in Ethiopia. Treatment usually involves lifelong medication use. Enalapril is a common drug for the treatment of hypertension in Ethiopia. However, the drug is expensive and, therefore, there is limited capacity for people to afford the treatment. Locally produced Enalapril is a cost-effective solution to treat the disease. However, as local medicines regulation does not include bioequivalence tests on locally produced drugs, physicians and patients need assurance about the effectiveness and safety of local generics. Evidence on therapeutic equivalence is needed on these untested local drugs.MethodsThis is a hospital-based, randomized, partially blinded, three-cycle crossover trial in single patients, comparing a locally produced version of enalapril with enalapril imported from Europe. Patients involved in this trial are not blinded, as there is no local facility to produce relatively small numbers of placebos or encapsulated drugs. To ensure blinding of study investigators and data analysts, study medications are prepared by an independent pharmacy unit using opaque medication packaging. The importance of maintaining blinding is also part of patient pre-trial education. Each N-of-1 trial will consist of three successive 14-day treatment pairs, each pair comprising 7 days of 5–20 mg local and 7 days of 5–20 mg imported enalapril taken once daily in the morning. The primary outcome will be the average difference in systolic blood pressure as measured by home blood pressure measurements.DiscussionThe number of locally produced products, such as enalapril, being approved without proof of bioequivalence is dramatically increasing. By bridging the information gap on bioequivalence, the trial will give rigorous evidence on therapeutic equivalence of locally produced enalapril in the treatment of hypertension. If there is no difference, the hypothesized result, then patients can take the local medicine with confidence. This trial will also will determine whether aggregated N-of-1 studies are feasible to evaluate untested generic drugs in resource-limited countries where bioequivalence testing centers are unavailable.Trial registration numberAustralian and New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry, ID: ACTRN12616001088437p. Registered on 12 August 2016.

Highlights

  • Hypertension is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in Ethiopia

  • To inform the design of this study, we conducted a preliminary qualitative study to assess the views of patients and physicians on local drugs. We identified that participants preferred imported drugs from Western countries, Germany

  • The Ethiopian guideline for registration of medicines states the need for clinical trial evidence on occasions when PK bioequivalence is not applicable

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Summary

Introduction

Hypertension is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in Ethiopia. Enalapril is a common drug for the treatment of hypertension in Ethiopia. Produced Enalapril is a cost-effective solution to treat the disease. As local medicines regulation does not include bioequivalence tests on locally produced drugs, physicians and patients need assurance about the effectiveness and safety of local generics. In 2008, the Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) identified hypertension as the seventh leading cause of mortality [5]. This makes it the single most important cause of mortality from non-communicable diseases in Ethiopia

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