Background. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin 11 (ATII)-receptor antagonists suppress the effects of ATII and are effective antihypertensive agents. However, the use of ACE inhibitors is sometimes associated with intolerable side effects (eg, cough, angioedema), and patients may develop a compensatory rise in ATII levels. ATII-receptor antagonists have tolerability profiles similar to that of placebo and inhibit the effects of ATII more completely by blocking the AT(I) receptor. Objective: This review summarizes clinical studies comparing the efficacy and tolerability of the ATII-receptor antagonist telmisartan with the ACE inhibitor enalapril in patients with hypertension. Methods: Randomized, controlled clinical trials comparing telmisartan with enalapril in patients with primary hypertension were identified through a PubMed search of the English-language literature from 1998 through 2001 and from bibliographic data provided by the manufacturer of telmisartan. Results: In 2 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials (total number of patients, 647), telmisartan 40 or 80 mg/d was at least as effective as enalapril 20 mg/d for lowering blood pressure (BP) in patients with mild to moderate hypertension. An open-label, titration-to-response study involving 86 patients with severe hypertension found that telmisartan 80 to 160 mg/d was as efficacious as enalapril 20 to 40 mg/d. The antihypertensive effects of telmisartan 20 to 80 mg/d and enalapril 5 to 20 mg/d were comparable in 278 elderly patients (age greater than or equal to65 years) with mild to moderate hypertension enrolled in a 26-week, double-blind, dose-titration study. A double-blind, titration-to-response study in 71 patients with moderate renal impairment and mild to moderate hypertension found equivalent reductions in BP with telmisartan 40 to 80 mg/d and enalapril 10 to 20 mg/d without any clinically relevant decline in renal function. Telmisartan tended to be better tolerated than enalapril in this study, with fewer patients experiencing treatment-related adverse events (8.9% vs 26.9%, respectively). Conclusions: Based on the literature included in this review, telmisartan and enalapril produced comparable reductions in BP in a broad range of patients with hypertension. Telmisartan appeared to have a better tolerability profile.