Abstract Background/Introduction A combination of blood pressure (BP)-lowering medications is recommended by guidelines as an effective strategy to obtain rapid and optimal BP control in hypertensive patients. However, the prescription of multiple BP-lowering medications increases the pill burden, potentially reducing medication adherence. Guidelines also recommend using single pill combinations(SPCs) containing ≥2 anti-hypertensive medications as a practical approach to simplify treatment schedules and possibly improve adherence. Yet, real-world evidence on the association between SPC or free combination of BP-lowering medications and hyperthensive patient outcome remains limited. Purpose We compared the association of SPC versus free-pill combination(free) on cardiovascular outcomes and all-cause mortality in hypertensive patients treated with perindopril(PER)-based therapies in real clinical practice in Italy. Methods A retrospective analysis was conducted using administrative databases covering 6.7 million health-assisted Italian residents. Among adults with hospitalization discharge diagnosis or exemption code for hypertension between 2010 and 2021, the study included patients prescribed with a combination of PER with amlodipine(AML) and/or indapamide(IND), either as SPC or free or mixed (SPC plus separate pill) combinations. Results The analysis included 24,476 hypertensive subjects receiving a PER-based therapy, 22,663 (93%) of them using SPC, 1458 (6%) free and 355 (1.4%) mixed. The last cohort was not included in the analysis due to the small sample size (N=355). The patients in the free cohort were significantly older than those in the SPC cohort (69.5±12.3 vs. 64.3±12.2 years, p<0.001), showed a higher number of pre-existing comorbidities (0.5±0.8 vs. 0.4±0.7, p<0.001), and received a larger number of different medications (pill burden: 1.2±1.7 vs. 0.7±1.3, p<0.001). To minimize selection bias, the groups were balanced with propensity score and inverse probability weighting (IPW), adjusting for baseline covariates, including comorbidity profile and pill burden. The IPW-adjusted Kaplan-Meier plots and Cox’s proportional hazard model (Table 1) revealed that, compared with SPC users, patients on free regimens had a significantly increased risk of all-cause mortality (36%, p<0.001), all cardiovascular events (45%, p<0.001), ischemic heart disease (29%, p<0.05), cerebrovascular events (84%, p<0.001), and occurrence of the composite outcome cardiovascular events/all-cause mortality (40%, p<0.001). Conclusions This real-world data from a large Italian administrative dataset suggested that PER-based anti-hypertensive therapy with SPC results in significant clinical benefits in terms of lowered risk of cardiovascular/cerebrovascular events and all-cause mortality. Reducing pill burden and simplifying therapeutic schedules is of crucial importance to maximize the potential benefits derived from the prescription of anti-hypertensive treatment.