Lorundrostat

Clinical trials are studying Lorundrostat in people with hypertension, including uncontrolled and resistant hypertension. These studies look at long-term safety, tolerability, and how well Lorundrostat lowers blood pressure. Some trial parts also examine albuminuria, which means protein in the urine.

Table of Contents

Clinical trial overview

Two Phase 3 studies are listed for Lorundrostat, both focused on hypertension, which means high blood pressure.[1][1] One study is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-arm, multicenter trial, and the other is an open-label extension study.[1] The trial records show that the main goals are to test efficacy, safety, and tolerability in people with uncontrolled or resistant hypertension.[1][1]

Conditions being studied

The first study targets uncontrolled and resistant hypertension, meaning blood pressure that stays high despite treatment.[1] The extension study includes subjects with hypertension and also looks at a subgroup with albuminuria, which means protein in the urine.[1] This matters because the trial is not only looking at blood pressure, but also at a possible kidney-related marker in some participants.[1]

Trial designs and phases

Both records describe Phase 3 research, which is a late stage of clinical testing.[1][1] The main trial is randomized and double-blind, so participants are assigned to groups by chance and neither the participants nor the study team know who receives which treatment during the study period.[1] It also uses placebo, which is a look-alike tablet without active study drug, to compare results fairly.[1]

The extension study is open-label, which means the treatment is known to the participant and the research team.[1] It is designed to follow people longer and assess whether the treatment effect lasts over time.[1] The record also mentions a randomized treatment withdrawal substudy, which tests what happens when treatment is removed in a controlled way.[1]

Who can participate

The studies include subjects with hypertension, especially those with uncontrolled or resistant hypertension.[1][1] The extension study also includes people who were already enrolled in the parent studies, showing that some participants continue into longer follow-up.[1] The trial data do not list every detailed eligibility rule, but they clearly focus on adults already living with difficult-to-control blood pressure.[1][1]

Main outcomes being measured

The main outcome in the randomized Phase 3 study is the change in automated office blood pressure (AOBP) systolic blood pressure, or SBP, at Week 6 compared with baseline.[1] Baseline means the starting point before the study treatment effect is measured.[1] In simple terms, the study is asking whether Lorundrostat lowers the top blood pressure number more than placebo.[1]

The extension study measures several blood pressure outcomes over time, including change from baseline to Week 12 and later follow-up points.[1] It also measures the change in AOBP SBP in a randomized treatment withdrawal substudy, which helps show whether the blood pressure benefit continues when treatment is changed.[1] Another outcome is the percent change in urine albumin creatinine ratio, or UACR, in participants who had albuminuria at the parent study baseline.[1]

The extension study also focuses on long-term safety and tolerability.[1] Safety means how well the treatment can be used without causing major harm, while tolerability means how well people can handle it overall.[1] These outcomes are important because hypertension treatment often needs to be used for a long time.[1]

What the trial data are trying to show

The trial records show that Lorundrostat is being studied as an add-on treatment for blood pressure control in people whose hypertension is hard to manage.[1] The main question is whether it can improve systolic blood pressure compared with placebo and whether the effect lasts during longer follow-up.[1][1] The extension study adds a second layer of research by looking at longer-term use, treatment withdrawal, and kidney-related markers such as albuminuria.[1]

Because one study is completed and the extension study is authorised, the records suggest that Lorundrostat has already been tested in a major late-stage program for hypertension.[1][1] The available data focus on whether the treatment can lower blood pressure, maintain that effect, and remain acceptable for longer use in the study population.[1][1]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
NCT05968430 Phase 3 Hypertension; uncontrolled and resistant hypertension Authorised 1400
NCT05968430 Phase 3 Uncontrolled and resistant hypertension Completed 1000

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Lorundrostat

  • Study on the Long-Term Safety and Effectiveness of Lorundrostat for Patients with Uncontrolled and Resistant Hypertension

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Bulgaria France Germany Italy The Netherlands Poland +2
  • Study on Lorundrostat for Patients with Uncontrolled and Resistant Hypertension

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Bulgaria France Germany Italy The Netherlands Poland +2

Glossary

  • Hypertension: High blood pressure. It means the force of blood against the artery walls is too high.
  • Uncontrolled hypertension: High blood pressure that is not staying within the target range, even with treatment.
  • Resistant hypertension: High blood pressure that stays high even when a person is already taking treatment.
  • Phase 3: A late stage of clinical research that studies how well a treatment works and how safe it is in larger groups of people.
  • Open-label extension study: A follow-up study where participants continue treatment and both the researchers and participants know what is being given.
  • Randomized: Participants are placed into study groups by chance, not by choice.
  • Double-blind: A study design where neither the participant nor the study team knows which treatment the participant gets during the study period.
  • Placebo: A look-alike tablet with no active study drug. It helps compare the real treatment against no active treatment.
  • Automated office blood pressure (AOBP): Blood pressure measured in the clinic with an automated device.
  • Systolic blood pressure (SBP): The top number in a blood pressure reading. It shows the pressure when the heart squeezes.
  • Albuminuria: Protein in the urine. It can be a sign that the kidneys are under stress or damaged.
  • Tolerability: How well people can handle a treatment without major problems.

References