Jmr. Detry, PATIENT COMPLIANCE AND THERAPEUTIC COVERAGE - AMLODIPINE VERSUS NIFEDIPINE SR IN THE TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION AND ANGINA - INTERIM RESULTS, Clinical cardiology, 17(9), 1994, pp. 12-16
An interim analysis of patient compliance is reported in 234 hypertens
ion outpatients who were entered into a large-scale, open, crossover,
comparative study between a new-generation calcium antagonist, amlodip
ine (5 mg, once daily), and nifedipine SR (20 mg, twice daily). An ana
lysis was also performed on 84 outpatients with stable angina pectoris
, who were included in an open, parallel study and received the same d
osing regimen of either amlodipine or nifedipine SR as the patients in
the hypertension arm of the study. In the hypertensive patients, ther
e were significant differences in favor of amlodipine, using all four
methods to assess patient compliance. In the angina patients, a signif
icant difference between the groups in favor of amlodipine was only fo
und using the ''correct dosing'' and the ''timing compliance'' methods
. With the traditional pill-counting and also the ''taking compliance'
' methods, there was no observed difference in compliance between the
two groups. It was concluded that, in terms of patient compliance, onc
e-daily amlodipine was markedly superior to twice-daily nifedipine in
the crossover study involving the hypertension patients. Amlodipine wa
s also better tolerated than nifedipine. In the angina arm of the stud
y, patient compliance was again better with amlodipine than with nifed
ipine, but there was no difference observed in the levels of tolerance
between the two therapies.