Reproducibility of masked hypertension among adults 30 years or older

Anthony J Viera, Feng-Chang Lin, Laura A Tuttle, Emily Olsson, Kristin Stankevitz, Susan S Girdler, J Larry Klein, Alan L Hinderliter, Anthony J Viera, Feng-Chang Lin, Laura A Tuttle, Emily Olsson, Kristin Stankevitz, Susan S Girdler, J Larry Klein, Alan L Hinderliter

Abstract

Objective: Masked hypertension (MH) refers to nonelevated office blood pressure (BP) with elevated out-of-office BP, but its reproducibility has not been conclusively established. We examined 1-week reproducibility of MH by home BP monitoring (HBPM) and ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM).

Methods: We recruited 420 adults not on BP-lowering medication, with recent clinic BP between 120/80 and 149/95 mmHg. For main comparisons, participants with office average less than 140/90 mmHg were considered to have MH if awake ABPM average was 135/85 mmHg or higher; they were considered to have MH by HBPM if the average was 135/85 mmHg or higher. Percentage agreements were quantified in terms of κ. We also examined the prevalence of MH, defined as office average less than 140/90 mmHg, with a 24-h ABPM average of 130/80 mmHg or higher. We carried out sensitivity analyses using different threshold BP levels for ABPM-office pairings and HBPM-office pairings for defining MH.

Results: Prevalence rates of MH based on office-awake ABPM pairings were 44 and 43%, with an agreement of 71% (κ=0.40; 95% confidence interval 0.31-0.49). MH was less prevalent (15 and 17%) using HBPM-office pairings, with agreement of 82% (κ=0.30; 95% confidence interval 0.16-0.44), and more prevalent when considering the 24-h average (50 and 48%). MH was also less prevalent when more stringent diagnostic criteria were applied. Office-HBPM pairings and office-awake ABPM pairings had fair agreement on MH classification on both occasions, with κ-values of 0.36 and 0.30.

Conclusion: MH has fair short-term reproducibility, providing further evidence that for some people, out-of-office BP is systematically higher than that measured in the office setting.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Blood Pressure (mm Hg) Distributions from Each Set of Measurements
Figure 2. Prevalence of Blood Pressure Classifications…
Figure 2. Prevalence of Blood Pressure Classifications at Baseline and One Week Later
Based on the first 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring session and its preceding office visit BP average, the prevalence of masked hypertension was 49.8%. Among these participants, 66% had masked hypertension at repeat monitoring one week later. ABPM, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring

Source: PubMed

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