Literature DB >> 33423526

Reproducibility of Office and Out-of-Office Blood Pressure Measurements in Children: Implications for Clinical Practice and Research.

George S Stergiou1, Ioanna Bountzona1, Christina Alamara1, Andriani Vazeou1, Anastasios Kollias1, Angeliki Ntineri1.   

Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the reproducibility of office (OBP), ambulatory (ABP), and home blood pressure (HBP) measurements in children and adolescents, and their implications in diagnosing hypertension in clinical practice and in pediatric hypertension research. Apparently healthy children and adolescents referred for suspected hypertension were included. Measurements of 2-visit OBP, 7-day HBP, and 24-hour ABP were performed twice, 1 to 6 months apart. Reproducibility was quantified using the SD of differences between repeated measurements. The sample size of clinical trials comparing the efficacy of antihypertensive drugs using each method was calculated. Fifty-eight individuals were analyzed (mean age, 13.0±2.9 years, 60.3% boys). The reproducibility of 24-hour ABP (SD of differences 5.7/4.5 systolic/diastolic) and HBP (5.9/5.0 mm Hg) were comparable and superior to that of visit-2 OBP (9.2/7.8) and awake (6.7/5.5) or asleep ABP (7.6/6.1). As a consequence, a parallel-group comparative trial aiming to detect a difference in the effect of 2 drugs of 10 mm Hg systolic BP, would require 36 participants when using OBP measurements, 14 using 24-hour ABP, and 15 using HBP (102/34/42 respectively for detecting a 5 mm Hg difference in diastolic BP). For a crossover design trial, the corresponding sample sizes are 9/3/4 for systolic BP and 26/9/11 for diastolic, respectively. These data suggest that in children and adolescents 24-hour ABP and 7-day HBP have similar reproducibility, superior to OBP and daytime or asleep ABP. These findings have major implications in diagnosing hypertension in children in clinical practice and in designing clinical research trials in pediatric hypertension.

Entities:  

Keywords:  accuracy; adolescents; blood pressure; hypertension; pediatric; repeatability; sample size

Year:  2021        PMID: 33423526     DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.120.16531

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


  4 in total

1.  Nocturnal Dipping and Left Ventricular Mass Index in the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children Cohort.

Authors:  Christine Y Bakhoum; Ronit Katz; Joshua A Samuels; Tala Al-Rousan; Susan L Furth; Joachim H Ix; Pranav S Garimella
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2021-11-12       Impact factor: 8.237

2.  White Coat Hypertension Persistence in Children and Adolescents: The Pediatric Nephrology Research Consortium Study.

Authors:  Yosuke Miyashita; Coral Hanevold; Anna Faino; Julia Scher; Marc Lande; Ikuyo Yamaguchi; Joel Hernandez; Alisa Acosta; Donald J Weaver; Jason Thomas; Mahmoud Kallash; Michael Ferguson; Ketan N Patel; Andrew M South; Megan Kelton; Joseph T Flynn
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  2022-03-26       Impact factor: 6.314

3.  Direct comparison of the reproducibility of in-office and self-measured home blood pressures.

Authors:  Kei Asayama; Takayoshi Ohkubo; Hiromi Rakugi; Masaaki Miyakawa; Hisao Mori; Tomohiro Katsuya; Yumi Ikehara; Shinichiro Ueda; Yusuke Ohya; Takuya Tsuchihashi; Kazuomi Kario; Katsuyuki Miura; Sadayoshi Ito; Satoshi Umemura
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2022-02-01       Impact factor: 4.844

Review 4.  Isolated Nocturnal Hypertension in Children.

Authors:  Midori Awazu
Journal:  Front Pediatr       Date:  2022-02-18       Impact factor: 3.418

  4 in total

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