Antihypertensive Medication Regimens Used by US Adults With Hypertension and the Potential for Fixed‐Dose Combination Products: The National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys 2015 to 2020

Author:

Derington Catherine G.1ORCID,Bress Adam P.1ORCID,Herrick Jennifer S.2ORCID,Jacobs Joshua A.1ORCID,Zheutlin Alexander R.12ORCID,Berchie Ransmond O.12ORCID,Conroy Molly B.12ORCID,Cushman William C.3ORCID,King Jordan B.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Intermountain Healthcare Department of Population Health Sciences, Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine University of Utah Salt Lake City UT USA

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine University of Utah Salt Lake City UT USA

3. Department of Preventive Medicine University of Tennessee Health Science Center TN Memphis USA

4. Institute for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Colorado Aurora CO USA

Abstract

Background Fixed‐dose combination (FDC) antihypertensive products improve blood pressure control and adherence among patients with hypertension. It is unknown to what degree commercially available FDC products meet the current hypertension management prescription patterns in the United States. Methods and Results This cross‐sectional analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys 2015 to March 2020 included participants with hypertension taking ≥2 antihypertensive medications (N=2451). After constructing each participant's regimen according to antihypertensive classes used, we estimated the extent to which the 7 class‐level FDC regimens available in the United States as of January 2023 would match the regimens used. Among a weighted population of 34.1 million US adults (mean age, 66.0 years; 52.8% women; 69.1% non‐Hispanic White race and ethnicity), the proportions using 2, 3, 4, and ≥5 antihypertensive classes were 60.6%, 28.2%, 9.1%, and 1.6%, respectively. The 7 FDC regimens were among 189 total regimens used (3.7%), and 39.2% of the population used one of the FDC regimens (95% CI, 35.5%–43.0%; 13.4 million US adults); 60.8% of the population (95% CI, 57.0%–64.5%; 20.7 million US adults) were using a regimen not available as a class‐equivalent FDC product. Conclusions Three in 5 US adults with hypertension taking ≥2 antihypertensive classes are using a regimen that is not commercially available as a class‐equivalent FDC product as of January 2023. To maximize the potential benefit of FDCs to improve medication adherence (and thus blood pressure control) among patients taking multiple antihypertensive medications, use of FDC‐compatible regimens and improvements in the product landscape are needed.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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