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Skin Sodium and Salt Sensitivity of Blood Pressure

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Hypertension
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT05976438
Lead Sponsor
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Brief Summary

Eating too much salt raises blood pressure and the risk of having a heart attack or stroke. The investigators do not fully understand why salt raises blood pressure, but storage of sodium in the body, particularly in the skin, may be important. For this reason, the investigators wish to study the link between skin sodium, blood pressure and cardiovascular risk in patients with high blood pressure, of different ethnicities, using techniques such as skin biopsy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The results will provide detailed information on skin sodium storage and help us better understand the effects of blood pressure medications on these mechanisms. Ultimately, the investigators aim to develop personalized treatment guidelines for clinical use.

Detailed Description

The physiological basis of salt sensitivity of blood pressure (SSBP) is poorly understood, and determining which patients have SSBP is not straightforward. Furthermore, determining salt sensitivity requires direct intervention tracking changes in blood pressure after salt challenge or depletion over several days. This makes identifying salt-sensitive individuals impractical in a clinical setting, hindering its application. It is crucial that the investigators elucidate the underlying mechanisms of salt-sensitivity, and through this understanding develop a biomarker of SSBP for clinical use.

From a review of recent studies it appears that in the short-term, accumulation of skin sodium during high salt intake attenuates the blood pressure response, while in the long-term, high skin sodium levels indicate a tendency for SSBP, hypertension and elevated cardiovascular risk. The reasons for this are not clear and merit further investigation. By refining methods for quantification of skin sodium and expanding its use in hypertension research, the clinicians can improve patient assessment, treatment prescription, and disease monitoring.

Using skin biopsy and sodium MRI provides a unique opportunity to study skin sodium handling and SSBP during antihypertensive treatment, and can provide insights into why hypertensives and certain ethnic groups have a higher incidence of SSBP. Sodium MRI may also help increase our understanding of the mechanisms by which diuretics work, both systemically and in the kidney and provide a way to identify salt-sensitive individuals for targeted clinical intervention.

Hypotheses:

1. Skin sodium decreases with salt-dependent (diuretic) treatments but not salt-independent (calcium channel blocker) treatments.

2. Diuretic-induced reductions in skin sodium correlate with reductions in blood pressure.

3. Skin sodium is higher in populations traditionally known to be more salt sensitive, such hypertensive patients of black ethnicity.

Patients will be enrolled on to a randomised, open-label, two-treatment two-period crossover treatment. The hypertensive medication used in this study are Amlodipine 5 or 10mg and Chlortalidone 25mg.

The duration for individual participants will be approximately 16 weeks. Participants will have a total of 7 visits including screening/enrolment (visit 1) and baseline visit (visit 2).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Have given written informed consent to participate

  2. Aged 18 or above

  3. Be hypertensive defined as:

    1. Currently untreated with an ABPM day time average blood pressure or average home blood pressure of ≥135 mmHg (systolic) or ≥85 mmHg (diastolic)

      OR

    2. Patients who are taking antihypertensive drugs at sub therapeutic doses or in ineffective combinations, and who are felt likely to be controllable on a study drug and willing and able to be washed out, at the discretion of the CI/PI, can enter the study if they meet the above criteria.

Exclusion Criteria
  1. Uncontrolled blood pressure ≥ 180/110mmHg
  2. Known or suspected secondary hypertension
  3. Pregnant or breastfeeding women
  4. Significant sensitivity or contraindications to any of the study medications
  5. Participants taking lithium or are regularly consuming non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs at variable doses
  6. Requirement to take any of the study drugs continuously e.g. ACEi and heart failure
  7. Any clinically significant hepatic impairment
  8. Any clinically significant kidney impairment
  9. Concurrent participation in another clinical trial or study using systemic vasoactive medications or medications known to interact with the study drugs
  10. Patients who are deemed unsuitable by the investigator on clinical grounds e.g. an abnormal heart rhythm due to Atrial Fibrillation (AF)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Open label arm 1AmlodipineParticipants will be randomised to AB sequence of drugs A: 1 to 2 weeks of Amlodipine 5mg followed by 6 to 7 weeks of Amlodipine 10mg B: Approximately 8 weeks of 25mg Chlortalidone
Open label arm 1ChlortalidoneParticipants will be randomised to AB sequence of drugs A: 1 to 2 weeks of Amlodipine 5mg followed by 6 to 7 weeks of Amlodipine 10mg B: Approximately 8 weeks of 25mg Chlortalidone
Open label arm 2AmlodipineParticipants will be randomised to BA sequence of drugs B: Approximately 8 weeks of 25mg Chlortalidone A: 1 to 2 weeks of Amlodipine 5mg followed by 6 to 7 weeks of Amlodipine 10mg
Open label arm 2ChlortalidoneParticipants will be randomised to BA sequence of drugs B: Approximately 8 weeks of 25mg Chlortalidone A: 1 to 2 weeks of Amlodipine 5mg followed by 6 to 7 weeks of Amlodipine 10mg
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Concentration of Skin sodiumApproximately 8 weeks after receiving each treatment up to week 16 which will be the study completion week

This is planned for all participants

Systolic blood pressureAll study visits - every 4 weeks up to week 16 which will be the study completion week

This is planned for all participants

Concentration of Skin PotassiumApproximately 8 weeks after receiving each treatment up to week 16 which will be the study completion week

This is planned for all participants

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Concentration of Skin glycosaminoglycansApproximately 8 weeks after receiving each treatment up to week 16 which will be the study completion week

This is planned for all participants

Diastolic blood pressureAll study visits - every 4 weeks up to week 16 which will be the study completion week

This is planned for all participants

MRI skin sodium concentrationApproximately 8 weeks after receiving each treatment up to week 16 which will be the study completion week

This is planned for all participants

Body weightBody weight measurement will be performed at baseline only.

This is planned for all participants

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Addenbrooke's Hospital

🇬🇧

Cambridge, United Kingdom

St Thomas' Hospital

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

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