Sunday 1 January 2017

Alpha-1-blocker therapy in benign prostate hyperplasia

Alpha-1-blocker therapy in benign prostate hyperplasia

Dr K K Aggarwal, National President IMA


Drug treatment can reduce symptoms from benign prostatic hyperplasia.
A meta-analysis by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) compared drugs or combinations of drugs developed in the past 10 years for treatment of BPH with monotherapy using older drugs.

Treatment with a newer alpha-1-blocker (AB) (silodosin), a combination of an anticholinergic drug (fesoterodine, tolterodine, or solifenacin) with an AB, or a phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE-5) inhibitor (tadalafil) resulted in similar short-term symptom relief but a greater risk of adverse effects compared with treatment with an older AB (primarily tamsulosin). 


Treat BPH symptoms with an AB alone, and choose the AB based upon cost, side effects (particularly hypotension), and potential medication interactions (especially with PDE-5 inhibitors). (Uptodate)

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