Abstract

Hypertension is associated with increased cardio- and cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality; antihypertensive drugs have been shown to reduce the risk of adverse cardio- and cerebrovascular events. These events tend to be more common during the morning hours, a time when both normo- and hypertensives show a circadian peak in blood pressure (BP). Although clinicians have a number of safe and well-tolerated antihypertensive agents in various classes and formulations at their disposal, few are designed to specifically attenuate the morning BP surge while maintaining 24-h efficacy. A novel, once-daily, long-acting formulation of diltiazem HCl (DTZ-LA) has been developed with chronodynamics in harmony with diurnal BP variation. DTZ-LA effectively reduces BP in a dose-dependent fashion over a 24-h dosing interval in patients with moderate-to-severe essential hypertension. When compared with a morning dose, the evening dose is associated with significant and clinically meaningful greater reductions in BP during the morning hours, when adverse cardiovascular events tend to cluster. Evening-dosed DTZ-LA was more effective than morning-dosed amlodipine in reducing morning diastolic BP in African-Americans. Evening-dosed DTZ-LA was also more effective than evening-dosed ramipril in reducing morning BP. Evening dosing of DTZ-LA significantly increased exercise tolerance in patients with angina pectoris over the 24-h interval. DTZ-LA is associated with adverse effects consistent with other diltiazem formulations, and overall is safe and well tolerated, even when titrated to doses of 540 mg/day.

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