Literature DB >> 30573476

MASked-unconTrolled hypERtension management based on office BP or on ambulatory blood pressure measurement (MASTER) Study: a randomised controlled trial protocol.

Gianfranco Parati1,2,3, Enrico Agabiti-Rosei4,5, George L Bakris6,7, Grzegorz Bilo2, Giovanna Branzi2, Franco Cecchi8, Marzena Chrostowska9, Alejandro De la Sierra10, Monica Domenech11, Maria Dorobantu12, Thays Faria2, Yong Huo13, Bojan Jelaković14, Thomas Kahan15,16, Alexandra Konradi17, Stéphane Laurent18, Nanfang Li19, Kushal Madan20, Giuseppe Mancia1, Richard J McManus21, Pietro Amedeo Modesti22, Juan Eugenio Ochoa2, José Andrés Octavio23, Stefano Omboni24, Paolo Palatini25, Jeong Bae Park26, Dario Pellegrini1, Sabine Perl27, Cristian Podoleanu28, Giacomo Pucci29,30, Josep Redon31,32, Nicolas Renna33, Moo Yong Rhee34, Enrique Rodilla Sala35, Ramiro Sanchez36, Roland Schmieder37, Davide Soranna2,38, George Stergiou39,40, Milos Stojanovic41, Konstantinos Tsioufis42, Maria Grazia Valsecchi43, Franco Veglio44, Gabriel Dario Waisman45, Ji Guang Wang46,47, Paulina Wijnmaalen2, Antonella Zambon2,38, Alberto Zanchetti2, Yuqing Zhang48.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Masked uncontrolled hypertension (MUCH) carries an increased risk of cardiovascular (CV) complications and can be identified through combined use of office (O) and ambulatory (A) blood pressure (BP) monitoring (M) in treated patients. However, it is still debated whether the information carried by ABPM should be considered for MUCH management. Aim of the MASked-unconTrolled hypERtension management based on OBP or on ambulatory blood pressure measurement (MASTER) Study is to assess the impact on outcome of MUCH management based on OBPM or ABPM. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: MASTER is a 4-year prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint investigation. A total of 1240 treated hypertensive patients from about 40 secondary care clinical centres worldwide will be included -upon confirming presence of MUCH (repeated on treatment OBP <140/90 mm Hg, and at least one of the following: daytime ABP ≥135/85 mm Hg; night-time ABP ≥120/70 mm Hg; 24 hour ABP ≥130/80 mm Hg), and will be randomised to a management strategy based on OBPM (group 1) or on ABPM (group 2). Patients in group 1 will have OBP measured at 0, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42 and 48 months and taken as a guide for treatment; ABPM will be performed at randomisation and at 12, 24, 36 and 48 months but will not be used to take treatment decisions. Patients randomised to group 2 will have ABPM performed at randomisation and all scheduled visits as a guide to antihypertensive treatment. The effects of MUCH management strategy based on ABPM or on OBPM on CV and renal intermediate outcomes (changing left ventricular mass and microalbuminuria, coprimary outcomes) at 1 year and on CV events at 4 years and on changes in BP-related variables will be assessed. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: MASTER study protocol has received approval by the ethical review board of Istituto Auxologico Italiano. The procedures set out in this protocol are in accordance with principles of Declaration of Helsinki and Good Clinical Practice guidelines. Results will be published in accordance with the CONSORT statement in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02804074; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2018. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; hypertension; hypertension management; masked uncontrolled hypertension; office blood pressure; treated hypertensive patients

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30573476      PMCID: PMC6303603          DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-021038

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Open        ISSN: 2044-6055            Impact factor:   2.692


The MASked-unconTrolled hypERtension management based on office BP (OBP) or on ambulatory blood pressure measurement Study is the first randomised controlled study so far addressing an important and still controversial issue, that is, whether using ambulatory BP monitoring rather than OBP measurements as a guide to antihypertensive treatment confers any benefit in terms of cardiovascular prevention. For practical reasons, a double-blind study design could not be implemented. Due to the multicentre nature of our study which includes hypertension centres from all over the world, there is the theoretical possibility of a dropout rate larger than expected. For this reason, however, we have implemented a strict study monitoring web-based.

Introduction

The finding in untreated hypertensives of normal blood pressure (BP) levels when measured in the medical office accompanied by elevated out-of-office BP as assessed by either 24 hour ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) or home BP monitoring (HBPM) is defined as ‘masked hypertension’. This condition is relatively common, characterising 10%–15% of individuals in a population.1 Remarkably, even after initiation of antihypertensive treatment, a substantial number of patients continue to show elevated BP levels out of the office, despite having apparently well-controlled BP levels during the medical visit. This condition has been defined as ‘masked uncontrolled hypertension’ (MUCH), and in a population of hypertensive patients under treatment has been reported to occur in as much as 30%–31% of cases.2 Moreover, there is evidence that prescription of antihypertensive treatment without adequate care of 24-hour BP coverage and, without implementation of ABPM in the assessment of treatment effects, may indeed be responsible for an increase in the frequency of MUCH.3 As in the case of MH, MUCH has been associated with an increased cardiovascular (CV) risk which is very similar to that of sustained hypertension and sustained uncontrolled hypertension in treated patients (ie, persistent elevation in both office and out-of-office BP levels).3 4 Several hypertension guidelines have indeed included suspicion of these conditions among the key clinical indications for out-of-office BP monitoring.5–11 The superiority of out-of-office BP versus office BP (OBP) measurements has been recently emphasised also by hypertension management guidelines, in particular by the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence guidelines which have recommended use of a time-restricted ABPM before starting treatment in patients with elevated OBP.12 However, key evidence from randomised ad hoc intervention trials on the benefits of using out-of-office BP measurement for assessment of BP control during the follow-up of treated hypertensive patients is still lacking. With the aim to better explore this issue, the MASTER Study (MASked-unconTrolled hypERtension management based on office BP or on ambulatory blood pressure measurement) will evaluate whether an ABPM-based hypertension management strategy is superior to an OBP monitoring (OBPM)-based strategy in changing left ventricular mass (LVM) and microalbuminuria (coprimary outcomes) at 1 year, in preventing CV events (secondary outcome) at 4 years and in improving several BP-related variables throughout the study. The MASTER study, focusing on MUCH patients, is thus expected to provide useful information aimed at finally clarifying whether a management strategy based on out-of-office BP measurements might provide a greater benefit in terms of prevention or regression of organ damage and CV events than a management strategy based on OBP readings only, thereby assessing the actual value of using out-of-office BP in improving CV protection.

Methods

Study design

The present study is a 4-year prospective, randomised, open-label, blinded-endpoint (PROBE) study aimed at comparing a management strategy for patients with MUCH, based on OBPM as a guide to antihypertensive treatment (group 1) versus a management strategy based on use of ABPM for the same purpose (group 2). The study will have a period of 2 years for the enrolment of the requested number of patients; and an average 4-year follow-up period (3 to 5 years). Study endpoints are changes in LVM and microalbuminuria (coprimary outcomes) at 1 year, prevention of CV events including all-cause mortality, CV morbidity and mortality (secondary outcomes) at 4 years and improvement of several BP-related variables throughout the study (tertiary outcome). Following a parallel group study design, patients will be randomised to one of the two management strategies by a centralised computer-generated sequence with an allocation ratio of 1:1.

Sample selection

Recruitment

MASTER is a multicentre, multinational study including around 40 clinical centres from different continents: Europe (Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Georgia, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Spain, Sweden), Asia (China, India, Korea) and South America (Argentina, Brazil, Venezuela). A list with the participating centres is provided in the online supplementary file 1. To all participating centres, the coordinating centre in Milan will supply the due study documentation, including a description of the protocol and of the expected tasks, and the files to be signed in relation to study participation agreement. In order to guarantee the necessary data quality, each participating centre will be asked to submit to the coordinating centre information on the available devices for collection of the data required by the protocol. They will also be asked to send a sample of the recorded files related to specific study variables for quality check and file approval by the coordinating centre team. This will be specifically required for digital ECG files, for cardiac ultrasound records, for 24 hour ABPM files and for HBP records. If the centre fulfils all requirements and complies with study quality standards, an official agreement will be signed with the coordinating centre before trial can be started. Approval by local ethics committee will also be required for each participating centre.

Screening and randomisation

Around 40 subjects will be enrolled in each centre upon verifying the study eligibility criteria listed in box 1. Male and female subjects; Age 40–80 years; Diagnosis of masked uncontrolled (on treatment) hypertension: office blood pressure (BP) <140/90 mm Hg, and one or more of the following situations: Ambulatory daytime BP ≥135/85 mm Hg Ambulatory night-time BP ≥120/70 mm Hg Ambulatory 24 hours BP ≥130/80 mm Hg Estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ≥45 mL/min/1.73 m2 (Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) creatinine equation 2009). eGFR <45 mL/min/1.73 m2 (CKD-EPI creatinine equation 2009), and in particular severe chronic renal failure defined as serum creatinine >250 µmol/L; One of the following conditions: Persistent atrial fibrillation Evidence of severe cardiac valve disease (ie, >2/4 grade at echocardiographic examination) Moderate and severe aortic stenosis Presence of cardiomyopathy Symptomatic heart failure or ejection fraction at or below 45% Patients in unstable clinical conditions; Known secondary hypertension; Orthostatic hypotension (systolic blood pressure fall >20 mm Hg on standing); Dementia (clinical diagnosis); Hepatic disease as determined by either aspartate transaminase or alanine transaminase values >2 times the upper reference limit; History of gastrointestinal surgery or disorders which could interfere with drug absorption; Known allergy or contraindications to one of the drugs to be administered in the study; History of malignancy including leukaemia and lymphoma (but not basal cell skin cancer) within the last 5 years; History of clinically significant autoimmune disorders such as systemic lupus erythematosus; History of drug or alcohol abuse within the last 5 years; History of non-compliance to medical regimens and/or patients who are considered potentially unreliable; Inability or unwillingness to give free informed consent; Pregnancy or planned pregnancy during study period. Patients are to be enrolled for screening and randomisation over 1 year (a maximum of 2 years will be allowed). During the screening period (1 month before randomisation), eligibility of the patient will be checked and baseline measurements performed. Initial assessment of selection criteria based on subjects’ clinical history will take place and, in case the subject is potentially eligible, the participation in the study will be proposed and informed consent obtained. During one or more screening visits, according to the need of the enrolling unit, the additional evaluations needed for a complete assessment of eligibility criteria will be performed, ie, full medical history, physical examination, blood and urine samples, conventional BP measurements, ABPM placement for 24 hour recording (device to be removed on the following day). Once the diagnosis of MUCH has been made, baseline study variables will be collected. These include 7 days HBPM through use of oscillometric devices validated by means of international protocols, ECG and echocardiographic examinations and blood and urine tests. Blood samples will be obtained for assessment of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), plasma creatinine, plasma glucose, glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), uric acid, serum sodium and potassium and plasma lipids. Two blood samples will also be collected at follow-up visit 1 and at follow-up visit 3 in order to create a study biobank for future analyses. Spot urine samples for urine albumin:creatinine ratio (UACR) will be taken twice, once in the morning before application of the ABPM device, and another time on the following morning when subjects will return to the clinical center for removing the ABPM device. At each study site, the responsible investigator will arrange a randomisation visit (within 1 month after the screening period) during which eligible patients (ie, those found to have MUCH) will be randomised to one of the two study groups following the dynamic allocation method for balancing baseline covariates (specifically centre, age, sex, presence of diabetes and baseline office systolic BP (SBP)) proposed by Xhiao et al in 2012.13 The patient’s randomisation number and allocation will be generated by a central computer using an online algorithm inbuilt on the electronic-Clinical Report Form (e-CRF). This approach adapts the algorithm proposed by Frane et al to obtain marginal balance for both continuous and categorical covariates, adding Efron’s biased coin method to decrease the predictability of treatment assigned to a new patient.14 This aspect is very important especially for unblinded trials. The original R code to perform this algorithm, furnished by the author, will be set on the platform managing the e-CRF.

Blinding (masking)

Because the MASTER is an open-label study, blinding will apply only for the endpoints. Thus, both participants and investigators will not be blinded to the allocated intervention. In order to guarantee the blind assessment of the coprimary end point of LVM, the personnel involved in its assessment (ie, sonographers) will be blinded to the patient’s allocated management strategy. In addition, ABPM data of patients enrolled to group 1 will be directly uploaded on the e-CRF and will not be available to the investigators in charge of treatment decisions. The role of the Event Adjudicating Committee (EAC) of the MASTER Study is essential in a trial such as MASTER, necessarily designed as a PROBE trial. EAC within the MASTER study will be responsible for verifying and adjudicating in a blinded fashion all events representing primary, secondary and tertiary outcomes of the study, as well as all serious adverse events occurring in the course of the trial. For this reason, the General Coordinating Centre in Milan will insure that all outcome documentations sent to EAC is blinded for management strategy and intensity of antihypertensive therapy. Documentation of each outcome occurring in patients will be sent (electronically or by fax) to two experts and to a third one in case the first two do not reach an agreement. Only validated outcomes will enter the final data analysis.

Interventions

Blood pressure levels in both study groups will be measured by three BP measurement techniques (OBP, HPB and 24 hour ABPM) following the recommendations issued by the European Society of Hypertension/European Society of Cardiology hypertension guidelines5 and BP monitoring groups.6–8 Indications on how to measure BP in the office, at home and in ambulatory conditions over 24 hours are provided in the supplemental operation manual. In order to standardise ABPM and OBPM data collection and analysis as much as possible, 24 hours ABPM in MASTER Study will be preferentially performed with A&D TM2430 device and OBP levels will be measured with A&D UA-651BLE device provided by the coordinating centre, thanks to a non-conditioning support given by the A&D Company (A&D Engineering, San Jose, California, USA). For HBPM, any of the currently available validated devices can be employed. Patients randomised to be managed based on OBP (group 1) will have their BP measured by the office method at all scheduled visits (at 0, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 42 and 48 months). In these patients, ABPM will only be performed at randomisation visit and at follow-up visits 3, 5, 7 and 9 and in case of premature discontinuation (ie, patients’ decision to withdraw, non-compliance with the study protocol) at any time. However, ABP values will not be used by the investigator to take treatment decisions, but treatment will be based on OBP only. According to the ABPM procedures manual of the MASTER Study, data of these patients will not be made available to the investigators in charge of treatment decisions, but will be directly uploaded on the study website (table 1). As indicated in table 1, additional tests and examinations will be performed at different time points during the study follow-up. For assessment of LV mass and function, both B mode and M mode two-dimensional (2D) echocardiographic measurements and calculation of LVM will be performed according to current American Society of Echocardiography guidelines.15–18 LVM will be calculated with the formula for estimation of LVM from LV linear dimensions.18 In order to account for obesity-related LV hypertrophy (LVH),16 17 correction of LVM will be performed both for height and for body surface area (BSA) using the Dubois and Dubois formula.15 17 Since LVM values differ between men and women, with the latter being systematically lower than the former, even when indexed for BSA, the presence of LVH will be defined on the basis of upper limits of normality for LVM of >115 g/m2 (>48 g/m 2.7) in men and >95 g/m2 (>44 g/m 2.7) in women following recommendations for cardiac chamber quantification by echocardiography in adults.18 Patterns of LVH (concentric vs eccentric) and remodelling will also be considered. LV systolic function will be estimated by calculating ejection fraction by means of the biplane method of disks summation (modified Simpson’s rule), which is the recommended 2D echocardiographic method by consensus.18 Diastolic function will also be assessed by considering the following parameters: mitral inflow pulsed wave (PW) Doppler, Doppler Tissue Imaging (DTI) of mitral annulus, PW Doppler of pulmonary vein flow, tricuspidal valve velocity peak calculated by continuous wave (CW) Doppler and indexed left atrial volume (biplane maximal left atrial volume will be calculated using the area-length method, and then indexed by BSA) as indicated by current guidelines.19 20
Table 1

Time schedule of enrolment, interventions, assessments and visits for participants

AssessmentScreening and randomisation visitsFollow-up visitsUnscheduled
Screening period (Baseline)RandomisationFollow-up 1Follow-up 2Follow-up 3Follow-up 4Follow-up 5Follow-up 6Follow-up 7Follow-up 8Follow-up 9 (Final)Premature discontinuation
Week −4 to −1Week 0Month 3Month 6Month 12Month 18Month 24Month 30Month 36Month 42Month 48
Selection criteriaXX
Informed consentX
Clinical historyX
Physical examinationX
BP measuresGroup 1Office BPXXXXXXXXXXXX
Home BPXXXX
24 hours ABPMXXXXXX
Group 2Office BPXXXXXXXXXXXX
Home BPXXXX
24 hours ABPMXXXXXXXXXXX
Blood sample for serum creatinineXX
Blood sample for serum creatinine, glucose, HbA1c, uric acid, Na+, K+, lipidsXXXXXX
ECGXXXXXXX
EchocardiogramXXXXXX
Urine sample for microalbuminuria and albumin:creatinine ratioXXXXXXX
Ascertain achievement of BP control/adjust antihypertensive treatment if neededXXXXXXXXXXX
Registration of antihypertensive therapyXXXXXXXXXXXX
Registration of concomitant medicationXXXXXXXXXXXX
Adverse events/safety evaluationXXXXXXXXXX
Blood sample for biobank creationXX

ABPM, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; BP, blood pressure; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin.

Time schedule of enrolment, interventions, assessments and visits for participants ABPM, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; BP, blood pressure; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin. ECG recordings will also be performed at different time points of the study in order to identify the presence of ECG LVH. This will be done by means of specific indices such as Cornell Voltage Product and Index and Sokolow-Lyon Index. The coprimary end point of urinary albumin excretion (UAE) will be evaluated from morning spot urine samples and expressed as UACR (mg/g). Spot urine samples will be taken twice, once in the morning before application of the ABPM device, and another time on the following morning when the ABPM device will be removed. Blood samples will also be obtained for determination of serum creatinine, glucose, HbA1c, uric acid, Na+, K+ and lipids as well as to create a study biobank. At each follow-up visit, physicians will not only ascertain achievement of BP control and/or adjust antihypertensive treatment if needed, but they will also record the type of antihypertensive therapy, presence of concomitant medications and adverse events on the study e-CRF for study safety evaluation (Table 1). Given that the trial inclusion criteria establish that all patients in MASTER should have OBP controlled by treatment (ie, systolic OBP <140 and diastolic OBP <90 mm Hg), all patients in group 1 will have their antihypertensive treatment unmodified at the randomisation visit. If at any of the subsequent trial visits, SBP or DBP will exceed normal values (ie, SBP ≥140 or DBP ≥90 mm Hg), antihypertensive treatment will be intensified according to available guidelines (figure 1). Patients randomised to be managed based on ABPM (group 2) will have their BP measured by the ambulatory method at all scheduled visits. OBP will also be measured at all visits, but it will not be used by the investigator to take treatment decisions. Given that the trial inclusion criteria establish that all patients in MASTER should have uncontrolled ambulatory SBP or diastolic BP (DBP) values (24 hour or daytime or night-time), all patients in group 2 will have their antihypertensive treatment intensified at the randomisation visit and at any of the subsequent trial visits, in which ambulatory SBP or DBP will exceed normal values (ie, 24 hour SBP ≥130 or 24 hour DBP ≥80 mm Hg; daytime SBP ≥135 or daytime DBP ≥85; night-time SBP ≥120 or night-time DBP ≥70 mm Hg), according to available guidelines (figure 1). In case only daytime or night-time target values are not achieved, change in timing of doses to morning or evening, respectively, should be considered. At each follow-up visit, achievement of ABP control will be ascertained and antihypertensive treatment will be adjusted if needed, according to guidelines (figure 1). Patients’ adherence will also be encouraged and monitored.
Figure 1

Randomisation groups and patient flow in the study. ABPM, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; AHT, antihypertensive treatment; BP, blood pressure.

Randomisation groups and patient flow in the study. ABPM, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; AHT, antihypertensive treatment; BP, blood pressure.

Sample size calculation

Sample size calculation was based on the primary study endpoint of changes in left ventricular mass index (LVMI) at 12th month. We do not know what proportion of the enrolled patients will have a diagnosis of LVH; therefore, the primary endpoint has not been based on categorical changes in LVH but rather on changes in LVM as a continuous variable. As the enrolled individuals are hypertensive patients with BP incompletely controlled by treatment, we expect LVM to be often higher than in subjects with sustained BP control (normal OPB and ABP levels). To calculate the sample size, we have assumed a difference of 5 g/m2 in the change of LVMI with the ABP-guided (group 2) compared with the OBP-guided (group 1) management strategy. This has been based on the consideration that SBP will be reduced by about 8 mm Hg more in the ABP-guided group, as well as on the echocardiographic data of studies such as REGAAL and CATCH in which differences in echo LVMI changes between treatments producing similar BP reductions were lower than 3 g/m2.20 21 The SD of ±25 g/m2 was also derived from data of REGAAL and CATCH as well as from previous assessment of within operator reproducibility.21 22 Considering a LVMI difference between groups of 5.0 g/m2 and a SD of 25 g/m2, an alpha of 0.025 (one-sided t-test) and a power (1-beta) of 90%, with a dropout rate of 15% during the study period, a minimum of 620 subjects per study group was deemed necessary, for a total number of 1240 subjects to be randomised. However, given the uncertainty about the true LVMI difference we might observe and/or the related SD, performance of an interim analysis has been decided aimed at a possible re-estimation of the sample size. This analysis will be carried out at 18th month when about 30% of randomised patients will achieve 1 year of follow-up. A re-estimation of the sample size will be calculated using the method of conditional power.23

Outcomes

Primary, secondary and tertiary outcomes are listed in box 2. Changes from baseline to 12th month in echo left ventricular mass index (LVMI, g/m2). Changes from baseline to 12th month in urine albumin:creatinine ratio (UACR, mg/g, morning spot sample). As compared with baseline, presence or absence of echo left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) (LVMI ≥115 g/m2 (men) or ≥95 g/m2 (women)) at 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. Changes in ECG indices of LVH (Cornell Product (main index), Cornell Voltage Index, Sokolow-Lyon Score) from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. As compared with baseline, presence or absence of ECG LVH: (Sokolow-Lyon Index ≥3.5 mV or Cornell Voltage Index ≥2.4 mV (men) or ≥2.0 mV (women) or Cornell Voltage Product ≥244 mVms) at 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. Increase of microalbuminuria (defined as increase in UACR by 100%) from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. Decrease of microalbuminuria (defined as reduction in UACR by 50%) from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. Changes in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (mL/min/1.73 m2), according to Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) creatinine equation (2009) from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. As compared with baseline, presence or absence of CKD (eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73 m2) at 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. The first occurrence of a composite endpoint of events including fatal and non-fatal stroke, acute myocardial infarction, angina, revascularisation procedures (coronary, carotid, iliaco-femoral), transient ischaemic attack, atrial fibrillation, cardiovascular death, hospitalisation for heart failure, progression to severe CKD (eGFR<30 mL/min/1.73 m2 (CKD-EPI creatinine equation (2009)), or doubling serum creatinine until 48th month. Changes from baseline in echo LVMI at 24th, 36th and 48th month. Changes from baseline in UACR at 24th, 36th and 48th month. Changes from baseline in office blood pressure (OBP) at 3rd, 6th, 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. Changes from baseline in ambulatory blood pressure (ABP; 24 hours, daytime and night-time BP) at 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. Changes from baseline in home blood pressure (HBP) at 12th and 48th month. Proportions of patients with controlled BP measured with OBP, HBP or ABP, respectively, at 12th and 48th month. Proportions of patients with controlled BP measured with OBP and ABP at 3, 6, 12 and 48 months (only for ABP group). Proportions of patients with controlled BP measured with OBP and HBP at 3, 12 and 48 months (for both groups). Number of prescribed antihypertensive drugs at 3rd, 6th, 12th and 48th month. Changes over time in the diagnosis of masked uncontrolled hypertension (on the basis of ABPM+OBP) at 12th and 48th month. Comparison of the prevalence of masked uncontrolled hypertension (on the basis of HBPM+OBP or of ABPM+OBP, respectively) at 12th and at the 48th month. Comparison between groups in visit-by-visit BP variability (standard deviation (SD); Coefficient of variation (CV); variability independent of the mean (VIM); average real variability (ARV)). Comparison between groups in 24 hour BP variability (24 hours SD; 24 hours weighted SD (wSD); ARV) at 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month. Comparison between groups in day-by-day BP variability (SD, VC, ARV, maximun (MAX) BP) at 12th and 48th month. Comparison between groups in Smoothness Index and treatment-on-variability index (TOVI) at 12th and 48th month. Comparison between groups in the correlation between changes from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month in LVMI and changes from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month of different measures of BP (OBP, ABP and HBP). Comparison between groups in the correlation between changes from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month in albuminuria and changes from baseline to 12th, 24th, 36th and 48th month of different measures of BP (OBP, ABP and HBP).

Patient and public involvement

Neither patients nor public have been involved during the design of MASTER Study. We only explored, in a pilot survey, how often OBP control was accompanied by persistence of elevated BP values at home in a number of patients referred to our hypertension centre. Results of MASTER study will be published in peer-reviewed scientific journals regardless of the outcome. Besides, MASTER study results will be available at https://clinicaltrials.gov/ either to patients or general public. Finally, assessment of the burden of the intervention has not been foreseen in the present study.

Data collection and data statement

All data collected locally at each enrolling unit will be recorded into an electronic e-CRF on the website of the trial (https://master.digitalcrf.eu). Clinical data to be input into the e-CRF include demographic information, results on blood and urine laboratory tests performed locally (ie, plasma creatinine and eGFR, fasting glucose, uric acid, Na+, K+, Lipid profile, HbA1c, urinary sediment), ongoing antihypertensive treatment (number and dose of antihypertensive drugs), report forms for adverse events during follow-up. Digital files containing raw data from imaging (echocardiograms) and device-based examinations (ABPM, HBPM data, ECG tracings) will also be uploaded on the study website linked to the study e-CRF for further analysis by the central reading sites.

Data management

Clinical data and recordings obtained with the various technologies will be uploaded in the study e-CRF and on the study website under online control by the Data Management Coordinating centre, which includes an audit trail system. The quality of data obtained with the different technologies (ie, echocardiograms, ECG, ABPM, HBPM) will be validated by expert personnel at the central reading sites. The occurrence of CV events (stroke, myocardial infarction, all major CV events, CV death, all cause death) and renal outcomes reported by each centre and supported by clinical source documents (ie, diagnostic tests, medical reports) will be validated by an adjudicating committee of experts blinded to assigned management strategy, BP values and organ damage measurements.

Data analysis plan

Descriptive analysis

Continuous data will be summarised by means of mean value, median, minimum, maximum, SE, SD and number of observations. Moreover, a 95% CI for the mean value will be provided. Categorical data will be summarised by means of absolute and relative frequencies. All these analyses will be performed per management group as well as for the study population as a whole. Unpaired t-test (or Mann-Whitney U test in case of non-normal distribution) for continuous variables or χ2 test for categorical ones in order to evaluate significant between-group differences at baseline will be applied. The incidence of adverse events will be tabulated by treatment group.

Statistical methods for coprimary endpoint analysis

We will consider two coprimary endpoints: change from baseline to 12th month in LVMI and in albumin:creatinine ratio. Each endpoint will be analysed by means of the analysis of covariance, adjusting the group effect for the baseline value of LVMI (or albumin:creatinine ratio) and for baseline covariates resulting significantly different between groups. Moreover, to have a valid inference, as suggested by several authors, we will adjust the model for all variables used in the dynamic allocation scheme.14 The assumption of parallelism will be tested by introducing one or more crossproduct terms between groups and continuous covariates to the model.

Statistical methods for secondary endpoint analysis

For all secondary endpoints, except for endpoint 8, we will consider a repeated measurement approach based on mixed models which contain both fixed effects (eg, BP measurement technique) and random effects (eg, patient). These models are likelihood-based approaches in the presence of ignorable missing data (ie, missing at random) and are a proper way to accommodate information on a patient with postrandomisation outcomes, even when such a patient’s profile is incomplete.24 In particular, for endpoints 1, 3, 4, 5 and 7, a repeated-measures model for dichotomous endpoints will be applied, while for endpoints 2, 6, 9 and 10, we will consider a model for continuous outcome. In both cases, the main purpose will be to determine whether the within-person changes over time vary across levels of one or more between-person factors (eg, BP measurement technique and for the same covariates included in the model for coprimary endpoints).14 For endpoint 8, cumulative proportion surviving curves according Kaplan-Meier will be obtained for each group and compared with the method of log-rank test. In order to explore the group effect on the timetoevent of composite outcome adjusting for baseline covariates, the Cox regression model will be fitted. Though the Cox model is non-parametric to the extent that no assumptions are made about the form of the baseline hazards, two important issues of non-informative censoring and proportional hazards will need to be verified. To satisfy the first assumption, the design of the underlying study must ensure that the mechanisms giving rise to censoring of individual subjects are not related to the probability of an event occurring. Care will be taken that continuation of follow-up does not depend on a participants medical condition. To satisfy the second assumption, the χ2 tests of proportional hazards assumption and the log-cumulative hazard plots will be made. If the assumption of proportionality is deemed reasonable, the assumptions of linearity and additivity, which are implicit in the linear predictor formula, will be considered. Although the composite endpoint could be misleading, we will not proceed to analyse each individual event considering the other events as competing causes of failure because also competing risk analysis can be misleading. Randomised controlled trials are frequently not powered to detect an effect of the intervention on individual components and competing risks analysis might have a low chance of detecting a true effect.25

Statistical methods for tertiary endpoint analysis

For endpoints 1–3, we will apply mixed models proposed for secondary endpoints. For endpoints 4–12, we will apply the χ2 test for dichotomous endpoints, the t-test (or median test whenever necessary) for continuous endpoints and, specifically for variation coefficients, the large sample Z test as suggested by Bhoj et al.26 For endpoints 13 and 14, the differences between the Pearson correlation coefficients of two groups will be calculated and reported with their 95% CI using the approach proposed by Zou.27 The handling of missing data will be based on a multiple imputation approach.24 All statistical tests will be interpreted at the 5% significance level considering two-sided test, unless specified otherwise. All statistical analyses will be performed by the Statistical Centre of Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Milan. Statistical packages will be used for the analyses, chosen among Stata (STATA data analysis and statistical software, Texas, USA), R (The R project for statistical computing, free software) and SAS (SAS Institute, Cary, North Carolina, USA).

Ethical considerations

MASTER study protocol has initially received approval by the ethics committee of the Istituto Auxologico Italiano. Thus, the ethical conduct of this study will be under the control of an independent Data Safety Monitoring Board, stemming out of the Istituto Auxologico Italiano Ethical Review Board. This is an investigator-generated study and as such will be performed in full independence of the study sponsor from any other funding body. The procedures set out in this protocol, pertaining to the conduct, evaluation and documentation, are designed to ensure that the sponsor and investigator abide to Good Clinical Practice guidelines and follow the guiding principles detailed in the Declaration of Helsinki.
  23 in total

1.  Left ventricular mass: allometric scaling, normative values, effect of obesity, and prognostic performance.

Authors:  Julio A Chirinos; Patrick Segers; Marc L De Buyzere; Richard A Kronmal; Muhammad W Raja; Dirk De Bacquer; Tom Claessens; Thierry C Gillebert; Martin St John-Sutton; Ernst R Rietzschel
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2010-05-10       Impact factor: 10.190

Review 2.  Recommendations for the evaluation of left ventricular diastolic function by echocardiography.

Authors:  Sherif F Nagueh; Christopher P Appleton; Thierry C Gillebert; Paolo N Marino; Jae K Oh; Otto A Smiseth; Alan D Waggoner; Frank A Flachskampf; Patricia A Pellikka; Arturo Evangelista
Journal:  J Am Soc Echocardiogr       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 5.251

3.  Comparative effects of candesartan and enalapril on left ventricular hypertrophy in patients with essential hypertension: the candesartan assessment in the treatment of cardiac hypertrophy (CATCH) study.

Authors:  Cesare Cuspidi; M Lorenza Muiesan; Laura Valagussa; Massimo Salvetti; Carlo Di Biagio; Enrico Agabiti-Rosei; Bruno Magnani; Alberto Zanchetti
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 4.844

4.  The Japanese Society of Hypertension Guidelines for the Management of Hypertension (JSH 2014).

Authors:  Kazuaki Shimamoto; Katsuyuki Ando; Toshiro Fujita; Naoyuki Hasebe; Jitsuo Higaki; Masatsugu Horiuchi; Yutaka Imai; Tsutomu Imaizumi; Toshihiko Ishimitsu; Masaaki Ito; Sadayoshi Ito; Hiroshi Itoh; Hiroshi Iwao; Hisashi Kai; Kazuomi Kario; Naoki Kashihara; Yuhei Kawano; Shokei Kim-Mitsuyama; Genjiro Kimura; Katsuhiko Kohara; Issei Komuro; Hiroo Kumagai; Hideo Matsuura; Katsuyuki Miura; Ryuichi Morishita; Mitsuhide Naruse; Koichi Node; Yusuke Ohya; Hiromi Rakugi; Ikuo Saito; Shigeyuki Saitoh; Kazuyuki Shimada; Tatsuo Shimosawa; Hiromichi Suzuki; Kouichi Tamura; Norio Tanahashi; Takuya Tsuchihashi; Makoto Uchiyama; Shinichiro Ueda; Satoshi Umemura
Journal:  Hypertens Res       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 3.872

5.  Recommendations for the Evaluation of Left Ventricular Diastolic Function by Echocardiography: An Update from the American Society of Echocardiography and the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging.

Authors:  Sherif F Nagueh; Otto A Smiseth; Christopher P Appleton; Benjamin F Byrd; Hisham Dokainish; Thor Edvardsen; Frank A Flachskampf; Thierry C Gillebert; Allan L Klein; Patrizio Lancellotti; Paolo Marino; Jae K Oh; Bogdan Alexandru Popescu; Alan D Waggoner
Journal:  J Am Soc Echocardiogr       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 5.251

6.  Cardiovascular outcome in treated hypertensive patients with responder, masked, false resistant, and true resistant hypertension.

Authors:  Sante D Pierdomenico; Domenico Lapenna; Anna Bucci; Roberta Di Tommaso; Rocco Di Mascio; Bianca M Manente; Maria P Caldarella; Matteo Neri; Franco Cuccurullo; Andrea Mezzetti
Journal:  Am J Hypertens       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 2.689

Review 7.  Diagnostic and predictive accuracy of blood pressure screening methods with consideration of rescreening intervals: a systematic review for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

Authors:  Margaret A Piper; Corinne V Evans; Brittany U Burda; Karen L Margolis; Elizabeth O'Connor; Evelyn P Whitlock
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2015-02-03       Impact factor: 25.391

Review 8.  Significance of white-coat hypertension in older persons with isolated systolic hypertension: a meta-analysis using the International Database on Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Relation to Cardiovascular Outcomes population.

Authors:  Stanley S Franklin; Lutgarde Thijs; Tine W Hansen; Yan Li; José Boggia; Masahiro Kikuya; Kristina Björklund-Bodegård; Takayoshi Ohkubo; Jørgen Jeppesen; Christian Torp-Pedersen; Eamon Dolan; Tatiana Kuznetsova; Katarzyna Stolarz-Skrzypek; Valérie Tikhonoff; Sofia Malyutina; Edoardo Casiglia; Yuri Nikitin; Lars Lind; Edgardo Sandoya; Kalina Kawecka-Jaszcz; Yutaka Imai; Jiguang Wang; Hans Ibsen; Eoin O'Brien; Jan A Staessen
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2012-01-17       Impact factor: 10.190

9.  Competing risks analyses: objectives and approaches.

Authors:  Marcel Wolbers; Michael T Koller; Vianda S Stel; Beat Schaer; Kitty J Jager; Karen Leffondré; Georg Heinze
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2014-04-07       Impact factor: 29.983

10.  2013 ESH/ESC guidelines for the management of arterial hypertension: the Task Force for the Management of Arterial Hypertension of the European Society of Hypertension (ESH) and of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).

Authors:  Giuseppe Mancia; Robert Fagard; Krzysztof Narkiewicz; Josep Redon; Alberto Zanchetti; Michael Böhm; Thierry Christiaens; Renata Cifkova; Guy De Backer; Anna Dominiczak; Maurizio Galderisi; Diederick E Grobbee; Tiny Jaarsma; Paulus Kirchhof; Sverre E Kjeldsen; Stéphane Laurent; Athanasios J Manolis; Peter M Nilsson; Luis Miguel Ruilope; Roland E Schmieder; Per Anton Sirnes; Peter Sleight; Margus Viigimaa; Bernard Waeber; Faiez Zannad; Josep Redon; Anna Dominiczak; Krzysztof Narkiewicz; Peter M Nilsson; Michel Burnier; Margus Viigimaa; Ettore Ambrosioni; Mark Caufield; Antonio Coca; Michael Hecht Olsen; Roland E Schmieder; Costas Tsioufis; Philippe van de Borne; Jose Luis Zamorano; Stephan Achenbach; Helmut Baumgartner; Jeroen J Bax; Héctor Bueno; Veronica Dean; Christi Deaton; Cetin Erol; Robert Fagard; Roberto Ferrari; David Hasdai; Arno W Hoes; Paulus Kirchhof; Juhani Knuuti; Philippe Kolh; Patrizio Lancellotti; Ales Linhart; Petros Nihoyannopoulos; Massimo F Piepoli; Piotr Ponikowski; Per Anton Sirnes; Juan Luis Tamargo; Michal Tendera; Adam Torbicki; William Wijns; Stephan Windecker; Denis L Clement; Antonio Coca; Thierry C Gillebert; Michal Tendera; Enrico Agabiti Rosei; Ettore Ambrosioni; Stefan D Anker; Johann Bauersachs; Jana Brguljan Hitij; Mark Caulfield; Marc De Buyzere; Sabina De Geest; Geneviève Anne Derumeaux; Serap Erdine; Csaba Farsang; Christian Funck-Brentano; Vjekoslav Gerc; Giuseppe Germano; Stephan Gielen; Herman Haller; Arno W Hoes; Jens Jordan; Thomas Kahan; Michel Komajda; Dragan Lovic; Heiko Mahrholdt; Michael Hecht Olsen; Jan Ostergren; Gianfranco Parati; Joep Perk; Jorge Polonia; Bogdan A Popescu; Zeljko Reiner; Lars Rydén; Yuriy Sirenko; Alice Stanton; Harry Struijker-Boudier; Costas Tsioufis; Philippe van de Borne; Charalambos Vlachopoulos; Massimo Volpe; David A Wood
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2013-06-14       Impact factor: 29.983

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  12 in total

1.  Prognostic value of non-resistant and resistant masked uncontrolled hypertension detected by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring.

Authors:  Francesca Coccina; Anna M Pierdomenico; Chiara Cuccurullo; Jacopo Pizzicannella; Maria T Guagnano; Giulia Renda; Oriana Trubiani; Francesco Cipollone; Sante D Pierdomenico
Journal:  J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)       Date:  2022-03-17       Impact factor: 2.885

2.  Prognostic Significance of Ambulatory BP Monitoring in CKD: A Report from the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) Study.

Authors:  Mahboob Rahman; Xue Wang; Joshua D Bundy; Jeanne Charleston; Debbie Cohen; Jordana Cohen; Paul E Drawz; Lama Ghazi; Edward Horowitz; James P Lash; Sarah Schrauben; Matthew R Weir; Dawei Xie; Raymond R Townsend
Journal:  J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2020-09-24       Impact factor: 10.121

3.  Proportion of US Adults Recommended Out-of-Clinic Blood Pressure Monitoring According to the 2017 Hypertension Clinical Practice Guidelines.

Authors:  John N Booth; Demetria Hubbard; Swati Sakhuja; Yuichiro Yano; Paul K Whelton; Jackson T Wright; Daichi Shimbo; Paul Muntner
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2019-06-24       Impact factor: 10.190

4.  White Coat and Masked Hypertension in Chronic Kidney Disease: Importance of the Difference Between Office and Out-of-Office Blood Pressure Measurements.

Authors:  Gianfranco Parati; Juan Eugenio Ochoa; Grzegorz Bilo
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2019-05-07       Impact factor: 5.501

5.  Emergence of Home Blood Pressure-Guided Management of Hypertension Based on Global Evidence.

Authors:  Kazuomi Kario; Daichi Shimbo; Satoshi Hoshide; Ji-Guang Wang; Kei Asayama; Takayoshi Ohkubo; Yutaka Imai; Richard J McManus; Anastasios Kollias; Teemu J Niiranen; Gianfranco Parati; Bryan Williams; Michael A Weber; Wanpen Vongpatanasin; Paul Muntner; George S Stergiou
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2019-07-01       Impact factor: 10.190

6.  Ambulatory Blood Pressure Profiles and Correlation with Cardiovascular Risk Factors in a Sample of 390 University Employees in Tanzania.

Authors:  Godfrey Chuwa; Pilly Chillo
Journal:  Integr Blood Press Control       Date:  2020-12-23

Review 7.  Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring over 24 h: A Latin American Society of Hypertension position paper-accessibility, clinical use and cost effectiveness of ABPM in Latin America in year 2020.

Authors:  Ramiro A Sánchez; José Boggia; Ernesto Peñaherrera; Weimar Sebba Barroso; Eduardo Barbosa; Raúl Villar; Leonardo Cobos; Rafael Hernández Hernández; Jesús Lopez; José Andrés Octavio; José Z Parra Carrillo; Agustín J Ramírez; Gianfranco Parati
Journal:  J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)       Date:  2020-02-12       Impact factor: 3.738

8.  Prevalence and clinical correlates of ambulatory blood pressure phenotypes in a Saudi hypertensive population.

Authors:  Azra Mahmud; Ruba Alahaideb; Haifa Alshammary; Mayar Abanumay; Afnan Alfawwaz; Sara Alhelabi; Amgad Alonazy; Muayed Al-Zaibag
Journal:  J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)       Date:  2020-09-23       Impact factor: 3.738

Review 9.  Clinical applications for out-of-office blood pressure monitoring.

Authors:  Hailan Zhu; Haoxiao Zheng; Xinyue Liu; Weiyi Mai; Yuli Huang
Journal:  Ther Adv Chronic Dis       Date:  2020-01-20       Impact factor: 5.091

10.  Impact of single-pill combination therapy on adherence, blood pressure control, and clinical outcomes: a rapid evidence assessment of recent literature.

Authors:  Konstantinos Tsioufis; Reinhold Kreutz; Georgia Sykara; Joris van Vugt; Tarek Hassan
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 4.776

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