| Literature DB >> 31628788 |
Sheikh Mohammed Shariful Islam1, Clara Chow2, Ralph Maddison1, Susie Cartledge1, Chandan Karmakar3, Jonathan Charles Rawstorn1, Steve F Fraser1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blood pressure (BP) is an important modifiable cardiovascular risk factor, yet its long-term monitoring remains problematic. Wearable cuffless devices enable the capture of multiple BP measures during everyday activities and could improve BP monitoring, but little is known about their validity or acceptability.Entities:
Keywords: ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; blood pressure; cardiovascular disease; hypertension; wearable device
Year: 2019 PMID: 31628788 PMCID: PMC6827985 DOI: 10.2196/14706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773

Wearable blood pressure device (T2 Mart blood pressure device).
Procedure for reference and wearable device blood pressure measurements validation.
| BPa measurement | Number | |
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| Take reference BP measurement (office BP) | Rc0 |
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| Take wearable device BP measurement | Wd0 |
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| Take first reference BP measurement (mean 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring) | R1 |
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| Take first wearable device BP measurement (mean 24-hour wearable device) | W1 |
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| Take second reference BP measurement (mean 7-day home BP monitoring) | R2 |
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| Take second wearable device BP measurement (mean 7-day wearable device) | W2 |
aBP: blood pressure.
bMeasurement R0 was not used in the evaluation of reference BP distribution and variability criteria. Measurements R0 and W0 were not used in the evaluation of the test device accuracy.
cR: reference blood pressure device.
dW: wearable blood pressure device.
Characteristics of the study participants.
| Characteristics | Study participants (n=20) | |
| Male, n (%) | 10 (50) | |
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| Mean (SD) | 20.3 (5.4) |
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| Range | 37.2-18.5 |
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| Mean (SD) | 23.6 (3.3) |
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| Range | 19.9-25.9 |
| Married/living with partner, n (%) | 8 (40) | |
| Education (master’s or above), n (%) | 13 (65) | |
| Employment (fulltime), n (%) | 12 (60) | |
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| Mean (SD) | 112.35 (9.79) |
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| Range | 95-131 |
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| Mean (SD) | 73.75 (9.14) |
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| Range | 47-96 |
aBP: blood pressure.
Blood pressure values measured by different devices.
| BPa | Mean (SD) | Range | MDb (SD) | MADc (SD) | MAPDd (SD) | Limits of agreement, MD (2SDs) | |||
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| Wearable | 125 (5) | 119-138 |
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| Ambulatory | 126 (10) | 111-150 |
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| Wearable | 77 (9) | 72-87 |
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| Ambulatory | 75 (6) | 64-90 |
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| — |
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| Wearable | 125 (4) | 113-139 |
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| Home | 112 (10) | 85-135 |
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| Wearable | 77 (3) | 68-87 |
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| Home | 71 (8) | 50-90 |
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aBP: blood pressure.
bMD: mean difference.
cMAD: mean absolute difference.
dMAPD: mean absolute percentage difference.
eP for mean difference between ambulatory and wearable (24 hours) devices.
fP for mean difference between home (7 days) and wearable (7 days) devices.

Box plot of ambulatory and wearable systolic and diastolic BP measurements. P value calculated using nonparametric Mann-Whitney U Test. P>.05 indicates the absence of systematic measurement bias between devices. ABPM: ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; BP: blood pressure; WBPM: wearable blood pressure monitoring device.

Bland-Altman plots between wearable and ambulatory blood pressure monitoring devices over 7 days. Measurement uncertainty during 24 hours of concurrent ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and wearable blood pressure monitoring. Black reference line represents mean bias, and red reference lines represent 95% limits of agreement. ABPM: ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; WBPM: wearable blood pressure monitoring device.
Advantages and disadvantages of using the study blood pressure devices.
| Device | Advantages | Disadvantages |
| Home BPa monitor | Pb05: “I thought it was so quick and easy to administer, and simple to use.” | P05: “It does rely on the participant to remember to take the readings but as long as they adhere to that...it’s quite a quick process.” |
| 24-hour ambulatory device | P08: “I suppose the positive of that [device] is that it was automatic. Um, it’s probably the only positive.” | P14: “It’s quite stressful to wear, I think it raised my blood pressure (laughs)…because you are just there, waiting every half an hour for it to go [take measurement].” |
| Wearable device | P13: “If you wear the watch in the morning you’re done for the day.”; P07: “You don’t notice it at all, in terms of it collecting any measurements.” | P02: “I would question…the accuracy of the BP measurement. It just didn’t seem to match up with all the...results from either of the other ones [measurements from other devices].”; P06: “When I was asleep I must have moved my wrist. And you know how it automatically lights up? It woke me up.” |
aBP: blood pressure.
bP: participant.