Key Points
1 Baxdrostat blocks aldosterone production to address root
cause of resistant hypertension
2 Phase III trial involved 800 patients across 214 global
clinics
3 40% of patients achieved healthy blood pressure levels
versus 20% on placebo
4 Drug showed persistent effectiveness up to 32 weeks with no
safety concerns
A new medication has
been shown to significantly lower blood pressure in people whose levels stay
dangerously high, despite taking several existing medicines, according to the
results of a Phase III clinical trial.
Globally, around 1.3
billion people have high blood pressure (hypertension), and in around half of
cases, the condition is uncontrolled or treatment-resistant. These individuals
face a much greater risk of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and early
death.
The international
trial showed that after 12 weeks, patients taking the new drug baxdrostat (1 mg
or 2 mg once daily in pill form) experienced a blood pressure reduction of
around 9-10 mmHg more than those taking the placebo -- a reduction large enough
to cut cardiovascular risk potentially.
About 4 in 10
patients reached healthy blood pressure levels, compared with fewer than 2 in
10 on placebo, revealed the trial, led by University College London’s Institute
of Cardiovascular Science.
The results,
published in the New England Journal of Medicine, were based on nearly 800
patients across 214 clinics worldwide.
“Achieving a nearly
10 mmHg reduction in systolic blood pressure with baxdrostat in the Phase III
trial is exciting, as this level of reduction is linked to substantially lower
risk of heart attack, stroke, heart failure and kidney disease,” said Principal
Investigator Professor Bryan Williams from UCL, while presenting the findings
at the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Congress 2025 in Madrid, Spain.
Blood pressure is
strongly influenced by a hormone called aldosterone, which helps the kidneys
regulate salt and water balance.
Some people produce
too much aldosterone, causing the body to hold onto salt and water. This
aldosterone dysregulation pushes blood pressure up and makes it very difficult
to control.
Baxdrostat works by
blocking aldosterone production, directly addressing this driver of high blood
pressure (hypertension). The findings are important as they can decode the
mechanism behind the difficult-to-control blood pressure.
Further, the study
showed that in patients with uncontrolled or resistant hypertension, the
addition of baxdrostat 1mg or 2mg once daily to background antihypertensive
therapy led to clinically meaningful reductions in systolic blood pressure,
which persisted up to 32 weeks with no unanticipated safety findings.
“This suggests that
aldosterone is playing an important role in causing difficult-to-control blood
pressure in millions of patients and offers hope for more effective treatment
in the future,” said Williams.
“The results suggest
that this drug could potentially help up to half a billion people globally,” he
added.
Baxdrostat Cuts Blood Pressure 10 mmHg in Resistant
Hypertension Trial
A new
medication called baxdrostat has shown remarkable results in treating resistant
hypertension by targeting aldosterone production. The Phase III trial
demonstrated a 9-10 mmHg greater reduction in systolic blood pressure compared
to placebo, which is clinically significant enough to reduce cardiovascular
risks. Nearly twice as many patients achieved healthy blood pressure levels
when taking baxdrostat versus those on placebo. This breakthrough could
potentially help up to half a billion people worldwide who struggle with
uncontrolled hypertension despite existing treatments.
https://www.newkerala.com/news/o/new-drug-shows-promise-people-treatment-resistant-hypertension-465
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