#9 Home in the Range – Home Blood Pressure Monitoring
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- One meta-analysis1 of 26 studies (5,651 patients) comparing HBPM versus usual care.
- At six months, systolic BP and diastolic BP improved by 3.9/2.4 mmHg.
- Not statistically significant at 12 months and beyond.
- No difference in quality of life.
- Medication adherence was statistically significantly improved in three trials, but not in five others.
- No trials have looked into hard cardiovascular outcomes.
- At six months, systolic BP and diastolic BP improved by 3.9/2.4 mmHg.
- European,5 US6 and Canadian7 guidelines all recommend HBPM.
- Home and office-based BP monitoring perform similarly overall in diagnosing hypertension.8
- The threshold for hypertension with HBPM is ≥135/85 mmHg.
- Disagreement between OBP and HBPM:5,6
- “White coat hypertension”:
- Office BP ≥140/90 mmHg and HBPM <135/85 mmHg.
- Occurs in <20%.
- Prognosis may be modestly worse than being normotensive.
- “Masked hypertension”:
- Office BP <140/90 mmHg but HBPM ≥135/85 mmHg.
- Occurs in <15%.
- Prognosis may be similar to being hypertensive.
- If available, consider ambulatory BP to help sort these out.
- Ambulatory BP should probably be given precedent as it has the larger volume of outcome data.
- If ambulatory BP disagrees with HBPM and office BP, repeat testing and followup should be considered as reproducibility is low in white coat and masked hypertension.
- HBPM is superior to office BP measurements in predicting cardiovascular risk.9
- HBP is generally lower than office BP (averaging 7 mmHg systolic/5 mmHg diastolic lower).10 The difference:
- Increases with age and in men (for systolic, not diastolic).
- Decreases in treated subjects.
- Interventions to improve BP (e.g. medications) result in smaller reductions in HBPM than OBP (in one systematic review,4 medications reduced OBP by 20.1/13.6 mmHg and HBPM 13.9/9.1 mmHg).
- Approach:5-7
- Oscillometric device approved by the Canadian Hypertension Society. For details on HBPM including video and written instructions, encourage patients to consult www.hypertension.ca. For a list of approved devices (cost $80-130) see: www.hypertension.ca/chs/deviceendorsements/devices-endorsed-by-chs/
- Arm-only (not wrist or finger) models.
- Educate patients to proper measurement technique.
- Preferable if device stores readings.
- Most recommend monitoring as duplicate readings twice daily for seven days (and discard first day)
- HBPM may not work well in patients with arrhythmia.
- Oscillometric device approved by the Canadian Hypertension Society. For details on HBPM including video and written instructions, encourage patients to consult www.hypertension.ca. For a list of approved devices (cost $80-130) see: www.hypertension.ca/chs/deviceendorsements/devices-endorsed-by-chs/
- “White coat hypertension”: