AB201. Two birds with one stone: α-blocker therapy on LUTS/BPH in men concomitant with mild hypertension
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AB201. Two birds with one stone: α-blocker therapy on LUTS/BPH in men concomitant with mild hypertension

Hengjun Xiao, Weixin Yan, Jun Wang, Jun Pang, Cheng Hu, Jun Chen, Bin Zhang, Xin Gao

Department of urology, the Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510630, China


Objective: To assess the clinical efficacy and safety of administering doxazosin as an alpha 1-blocker in patients with comorbid LUTS/BPH and mild hypertension.

Methods: One hundred and fifty-six enrolled men concomitant with comorbid LUTS/BPH and mild hypertension who completed the International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS >7 points) at the first visit in our clinic were eligible in this trial. All the patients were assessed based on IPSS, IPSS-Quality of Life for LUTS/BPH and received blood pressure (BP) determination. Those men with normotensive and moderate-to-severe hypertension were excluded. Urologic and cardiologic assessment included uroflowmetry (maximum urinary flow rate, Qmax), IPSS, and BP measurements. They were administered with 4 mg of doxazosin once daily for 12 weeks. Changes of IPSS, Qmax, Quality of Life for LUTS/BPH, systolic and diastolic BP were evaluated every 4 weeks. Safety was mainly assessed via spontaneous reports of adverse events.

Results: After treatment with doxazosin, IPSS in those LUTS/BPH men significantly decreased (15.2±4.8 vs. 10.7±3.5 points, P<0.001), whereas Qmax increased (9.4±2.5 and 11.8±4.3 mL/s, P<0.01), respectively. Doxazosin demonstrated efficacy in lowering IPSS score and relieving LUTS. Of them, systolic and diastolic BP of 124 patients (79.5%) decreased to normal. Most patients were generally well tolerant to the treatment and there was no evidence of additional side effects related to administration. No orthostatic hypotension and other BP-related adverse profiles occurred in all patients.

Conclusions: Our data show that doxazosin as an alpha 1-blocker treatment appears to be efficacious in both relieving bothersome lower urinary tract symptoms and decreasing BP in LUTS/BPH men with mild hypertension.

Keywords: Doxazosin; lower urinary tract symptoms; mild hypertension; alpha-blocker


doi: 10.21037/tau.2016.s201


Cite this abstract as: Xiao H, Yan W, Wang J, Pang J, Hu C, Chen J, Zhang B, Gao X. Two birds with one stone: α-blocker therapy on LUTS/BPH in men concomitant with mild hypertension. Transl Androl Urol 2016;5(Suppl 1):AB201. doi: 10.21037/tau.2016.s201

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