Intended for healthcare professionals

Commentary

The PROGRESS trial three years later: time for more action, less distraction

BMJ 2004; 329 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.329.7472.970 (Published 21 October 2004) Cite this as: BMJ 2004;329:970

This article has a correction. Please see:

  1. Stephen MacMahon (smacmahon{at}thegeorgeinstitute.org), professor of cardiovascular medicine and epidemiology1,
  2. Bruce Neal, associate professor of medicine1,
  3. Anthony Rodgers, director2,
  4. John Chalmers, emeritus professor of medicine1
  1. 1 The George Institute for International Health, University of Sydney, PO Box M201, Sydney, NSW 2050, Australia
  2. 2 Clinical Trials Research Unit, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand
  1. Correspondence to: S MacMahon

    Since the publication of the results of the PROGRESS trial, there has been much comment in the BMJ and elsewhere.1 2 Most of this acknowledges the importance of the findings for the care of patients with cerebrovascular disease. These patients are at high risk of stroke recurrence, and before the trial was completed few interventions had been proved to reduce this risk. Aspirin was known to modestly reduce the risk of recurrence of ischaemic stroke, but no treatment had been shown to reduce the frequently catastrophic recurrence of cerebral haemorrhage. This situation was changed profoundly by the results of PROGRESS, which showed that a simple blood pressure lowering regimen substantially reduced the risks of recurrent stroke,3 disability,4 and cardiac events5 across a broad range of blood pressure levels in patients with either ischaemic or haemorrhagic cerebrovascular disease.

    PROGRESS was conceived during an era in which many stroke specialists were concerned about possible risks of blood pressure lowering in patients with compromised cerebral circulation. While epidemiological evidence indicated that the lowest blood pressure levels were associated with the lowest risks of stroke recurrence,6 prevailing clinical opinion required us to allow individual doctors the discretion to determine the intensity of the blood pressure lowering regimen they provided to individual patients. The treatment regimen in the study comprised the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor perindopril and the diuretic indapamide. Our objective was to have as many patients as possible treated with both drugs; however, the treating doctors decided whether to introduce indapamide after patients had been stablised on perindopril.

    Although PROGRESS was not designed to determine the separate effects of perindopril and indapamide, the benefits of combination treatment with these agents proved to be particularly large, with stroke risks cut by almost a half and reductions in most other cardiovascular outcomes, including death. Conversely, treatment with perindopril alone provided no detectable benefits, although the 95% confidence intervals were wide and modest benefits could not be excluded. Not surprisingly, therefore, the principal conclusion was that patients with cerebrovascular disease should be considered routinely for combination treatment with perindopril and indapamide.3 This regimen would prevent at least one major event among every 10 patients treated for five years,5 an outcome that would materially improve prognosis.

    The importance of these findings was clear to those responsible for developing major new guidelines for the treatment of hypertension7 8 and stroke.9 However, the same cannot be said for a few commentators,1 10 who have sought to focus debate on the comparative effects of the two drugs used in the study, even though PROGRESS provides no useful information about this. A pervasive fixation with the comparative effects of different drugs has unduly influenced recent debate about the effects of blood pressure lowering. Much of this has been fuelled by pharmaceutical companies claiming supposedly unique effects of their own drugs or adverse effects of competitors drugs, but there have also been counterclaims by special interest groups of unique protective effects of off-patent drugs and adverse effects of on-patent drugs. However, in large scale randomised trials comparing different treatment regimens, the evidence of “special” drug effects has mostly proved evanescent.11

    What is clearer is that the size of the blood pressure reduction is a major determinant of outcome,11 a finding consistent with the observation in PROGRESS that combination therapy produced larger reductions in blood pressure and stroke risk than did a single drug. Some have argued that the observed difference in outcomes cannot be explained by differences in blood pressure,1 10 but this is refuted by data on the predicted effects of blood pressure reduction among patients with cerebrovascular disease.6 The predicted and observed effects of the overall blood pressure reduction achieved in PROGRESS (9/4 mm Hg) are identical (figure). Additionally, the observed effects of combination therapy and single drug therapy are not significantly different from those predicted, although the confidence limits for the estimates of observed effects were wide.

    Figure1

    Predicted and observed effects of blood pressure lowering among patients with ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attacks. Predicted reductions in stroke risk and 95% confidence interval for a given reduction in usual systolic blood pressure are indicated by diagonal lines6; Observed effects of treatment on stroke risk and 95% confidence intervals are indicated by vertical lines and boxes.3 Box sizes are proportional to the number of strokes. All estimates of reductions in stroke risk are plotted on a logarithmic scale

    The finding that combination therapy produces benefits at least as large as those predicted by epidemiological studies provides strong support for the recommendation that stroke patients should be considered routinely for treatment with both perindopril and indapamide.3 Although PROGRESS provides no evidence about the effects of other blood pressure lowering drugs, there is no particular reason to believe that other regimens would not confer benefits, and in resource poor settings where access to perindopril and indapamide is limited it would seem reasonable to recommend alternate agents. However, continuing the academic debate about the effects of different blood pressure lowering agents for the secondary prevention of stroke only retards the implementation of the findings of PROGRESS. If patients are denied intensive blood pressure lowering treatment as a consequence, unnecessary suffering will result. For the sake of the 50 million people worldwide with cerebrovascular disease, let's set aside arguments about elusive special drug effects and focus on the issue of prime importance. To adapt the well known words of a recent US president: “It's the blood pressure, stupid.”

    Footnotes

    • ARTICLE
    • Contributors SM, BN, AR and JC all contributed to initial and subsequent drafts of this commentary. Arier Lee conducted the statistical analyses comparing predicted and observed effects of blood pressure reduction in PROGRESS; Jeffery Cutler, Charles Warlow, and Mark Woodward advised on the interpretation of those analyses.

    • Competing interests BN is the recipient of a career development award from the Heart Foundation of Australia. AR is a senior fellow of the National Heart Foundation of New Zealand. PROGESS was supported by grants from the Health Research Council of New Zealand, the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia and the Institut de Recherches Internationale Servier. PROGRESS was designed, conducted, analysed, and reported by the collaborating investigators independently of all sponsors. Each of the authors has received research grants and travel expenses or lecture honorariums from one or more of these three study sponsors.

    References

    1. 1.
    2. 2.
    3. 3.
    4. 4.
    5. 5.
    6. 6.
    7. 7.
    8. 8.
    9. 9.
    10. 10.
    11. 11.
    View Abstract