Purpose: Although the role of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors for the treatment of hypertension has been well established, no data has been generated regarding the influence of ACE inhibitors for health-related quality-of-life (QOL) dimensions for Chinese patients.
Materials: A double-blind, active-control, randomized clinical trial was used to compare the effects of two ACE inhibitors, imidapril and captopril, on quality-of-life dimensions in one outpatient clinic in one tertiary clinical-care facility. After a 2-3 week washout period with placebo, 59 patients with mild-to-moderate hypertension were randomly assigned to receive imidapril (5 to 10 mg per day) or captopril (25 to 50 mg twice per day) for 12 weeks. Patients completed the Short-form 36 (SF 36) health survey questionnaire, which evaluates 8 QOL dimensions, just before treatment, during the 8th week, and at the end of treatment (12th week). ANOVA for repeated measures was used to analyze the QOL-score changes over time and compare treatments, and to assess the interaction of treatment duration and group on these scores.
Results: No significant differences were demonstrated for changes in blood-pressure, frequency of adverse effects and withdrawal of patients from the study comparing the two drugs. Significant improvement, however, was demonstrated for mental-component summary scores after 12 weeks of treatment for both drugs (P = 0.029). No significant differences were established for individual QOL dimensions comparing the two drugs. A significantly higher baseline systolic blood pressure was found in the participants who did not complete the questionnaire than in those who did.
Conclusions: Similar and significant improvements were determined for the mental-component QOL summary scores for the two ACE inhibitors, imidapril and captopril, and no significant differences were demonstrated comparing treatments.