Antihypertensive Treatment Based on Conventional or Ambulatory Blood Pressure Measurement
- 1 October 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 278 (13), 1065-1072
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1997.03550130039034
Abstract
Context. —Ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) monitoring is used increasingly in clinical practice, but how it affects treatment of blood pressure has not been determined. Objective. —To compare conventional blood pressure (CBP) measurement and ABP measurement in the management of hypertensive patients. Design. —Multicenter randomized, parallel-group trial. Setting —Family practices and outpatient clinics at regional and university hospitals. Participants. —A total of 419 patients (-18 years), whose untreated diastolic blood pressure (DBP) on CBP measurement averaged 95 mm Hg or higher, randomized to CBP or ABP arms. Interventions. —Antihypertensive drug treatment was adjusted in a stepwise fashion based on either the average daytime (from 10 am to 8 pm) ambulatory DBP (n=213) or the average of 3 sitting DBP readings (n=206). If the DBP guiding treatment was above (>89 mm Hg), at (80-89 mm Hg), or below (P<.001), and fewer ABP patients had progressed to sustained multiple-drug treatment (27.2% vs 42.7%;P<.001). The final CBP and 24-hour ABP averaged 144.1/89.9 mm Hg and 129.4/79.5 mm Hg in the ABP group and 140.3/89.6 mm Hg and 128.0/79.1 mm Hg in the CBP group. Left ventricular mass and reported symptoms were similar in the 2 groups. The potential savings in the ABP group in termsof less intensive drug treatment and fewer physician visits were offset by the costs of ABP monitoring. Conclusions. —Adjustment of antihypertensive treatment based on ABP monitoring instead of CBP measurement led to less intensive drug treatment with preservation of blood pressure control, general well-being, and inhibition of left ventricular enlargement but did not reduce the overall costs of antihypertensive treatment.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prognostic Significance of the White Coat EffectHypertension, 1997
- Prediction of the actual awake and asleep blood pressures by various methods of 24 h pressure analysisJournal Of Hypertension, 1996
- Declaration of Helsinki—Recommendations Guiding Physicians in Biomedical Research Involving Human SubjectsJournal of Nutritional Medicine, 1992
- The inheritance of left ventricular structure and function assessed by imaging and Doppler echocardiographyAmerican Heart Journal, 1991
- Accuracy of the SpaceLabs 90207 determined by the British Hypertension Society ProtocolJournal Of Hypertension, 1991
- Analysis of serial measurements in medical research.BMJ, 1990
- Assessment of four ambulatory blood pressure monitors and measurements by clinicians versus intraarterial blood pressure at rest and during exerciseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1990
- Echocardiographic assessment of left ventricular hypertrophy: Comparison to necropsy findingsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1986
- Recommendations regarding quantitation in M-mode echocardiography: results of a survey of echocardiographic measurements.Circulation, 1978
- The ventricular complex in left ventricular hypertrophy as obtained by unipolar precordial and limb leadsAmerican Heart Journal, 1949