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Specific guide to this web site for:


 1.  Medical School
      Educators 
      in Statistics


 2.  Medical Students

 3.  Science media writers

 4.  High School & College
     Statistic Teachers


   Misadventures:


1. Harvard led study

2. JACC study 

   (J. of Amer. Coll.
   Cardio.)


3. NEJM cath study

4. Amer. J. of Cardio.
    review of literature

5.
ALLHAT
    controversy
 

6.
Oat bran study

7.
Pregnancy & Alcohol

8.
Are Geminis really
   
different?
      
9. Columbia 'Miracle' Study  
                                                 

Additional Topics:

Celebrex

Limitations of Meta-Analyses

Large Randomized Clinical Trials

Tale of Two Large
Trials

Meta-analyses Bearing False Gifts

Network meta-analyses






 

 

 

The ALLHAT trial                            

The ALLHAT trial results are only broadly applicable to the treatment of hypertension if the following fallacies are true:

  1. The initial treatment with an ACE inhibitor or a calcium channel blocker precluded the use of a diuretic.
 
  2. Starting an ACE inhibitor or calcium channel blocker required stopping diuretic therapy, including in patients with prior myocardial infarction or patients with LVH.
 
  3. An ACE inhibitor and calcium channel blocker could not be used in combination. 

  4. Equivalent blood pressure endpoints could not be achieved if an ACE inhibitor is used as the initial drug.

Diuretic Withdrawal
Impact of ALLHAT treatment protocol requiring withdrawal of diuretic therapy and a high threshold to start a diuretic:

   The ALLHAT trial protocol resulted in the withdrawal of preexisting diuretic therapy from many of the patients who were assigned to amlodipine or lisinopril treatment protocols. (90% of the patients entered into the trial had prior blood medications discontinued.)

   In addition to the patients who had a diuretic withdrawn, there were patients at increased risk for CHF on the basis of prior MI and LVH, who were routinely not allowed to start a diuretic unless CHF developed or other difficulties arose. 

   It is not a surprise that CHF or volume overload developed over the course of the trial since diuretic therapy could not be employed for early signs of volume excess. And in contrast to CHF developing from a less contrived situation, the CHF occurring during the ALLHAT trial was subsequently treated without an increase in mortality when a diuretic could finally be instituted.    details

________________________

One of the lead authors of ALLHAT subsequently published a meta-analysis to support the opinion that diuretics should be the initial therapy for hypertension (see critique of meta-analysis

 

The ALLHAT hypertension study came to conclusions not supported by the results of the trial.

  ALLHAT trial critique:     [ download  (pdf) ]

The ALLHAT trial is a trial with a reasonable data set, but a “political" set of conclusions. The authors provoked immediate controversy by going beyond a straightforward interpretation of the data generated by this trial.

The ALLHAT trial (Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial) was a trial of 33,000 patients.  The authors reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA 2002)1 on three blood pressure treatment regimens.

Why are the ALLHAT authors’ conclusions that their trial proves that a diuretic is the best initial treatment for high blood pressure invalid?

     1. Blood pressure treatment trials compare specific multiple drug treatment trials rather than isolated drugs. details

     2. The ALLHAT authors substantially underestimate the effect on outcome of the 3mm difference in blood pressure that occurred between diuretic arm compared to ACE inhibitor arm. details

     3. Arbitrary emphasis by the ALLHAT authors on difference between treatment arms in the incidence of CHF, while discounting the importance of the difference in diabetes incidence.  (Neither was associated with a  mortality difference during the time period of the trial.) details
 
     4. The ALLHAT trial was diuretic withdrawal trial in a patient population including those with prior MI and with LVH. A high threshold for starting a diuretic in the treatment arms not initially using diuretics in the ALLHAT trial would increase the incidence of CHF.  See right column

 5. A subsequent meta-analysis of hypertension trials by some of the ALLHAT authors was significantly flawed:  (Critique of ALLHAT meta-analysis)

Fallacies that would need to be true for the ALLHAT conclusions to be broadly applicable.  (see right column)

Effects of diuretic withdrawal on the development of CHF in the ALLHAT study.  (see  lower right column)

The European Society for Hypertension guidelines for hypertension are quite different from the ALLHAT influenced JNC 7 guidelines for hypertension:
In contrast to the JNC 7, the European Society for Hypertension guidelines  created in response to the same studies state that the major classes of antihypertensive agents, (including diuretics, beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, calcium channel blockers, and angiotensin receptor blockers) are all suitable for initial and maintenance therapy.

Input from the ALLHAT authors who were on the committee that drafted the JNC 7 guidelines for hypertension led to a different outlook:  "Thiazide-type diuretics should be used ... in most patients with uncomplicated hypertension, whether alone or combined with drugs from other classes."

1. ALLHAT Officers and Coordinators for the ALLHAT Collaborative Research Group. Major outcomes in high-risk hypertensive patients randomized to angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or calcium channel blocker vs. diuretic: the antihypertensive and lipid-lowering treatment to prevent heart attack trial (ALLHAT). JAMA 2002; 288: 2981-2997

 

 

 

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