4.5 Article

Blood pressure variability assessed by office, home, and ambulatory measurements: comparison, agreement, and determinants

Journal

HYPERTENSION RESEARCH
Volume 44, Issue 12, Pages 1617-1624

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41440-021-00736-9

Keywords

Blood pressure variability; Blood pressure monitoring; Indices

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This study compared blood pressure variability (BPV) among different measurement methods and found that out-of-office BPV was higher than office BPV, with ambulatory BP monitoring giving the highest values. There was weak association among BPV indices assessed using different methods, but stronger agreement between out-of-office BPV indices in identifying individuals with high BPV. Older age was independently associated with increased office BPV, while older age, female sex, smoking, and overweight/obesity were determinants of increased out-of-office BPV. The study suggests that choosing the BPV index may be less important compared to the method of measurement, and office and out-of-office BP measurements can complement each other in assessing BPV.
The present study compared the blood pressure variability (BPV) among office (OBP), home (HBP), and ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) measurements and assessed their determinants, as well as their agreement in identifying individuals with high BPV. Individuals attending a hypertension clinic had OBP measurements (2-3 visits) and underwent HBP monitoring (3-7 days, duplicate morning and evening measurements) and ABP monitoring (24 h, 20-min intervals). BPV was quantified using the standard deviation (SD), coefficient of variation (CV), and variability independent of the mean (VIM) using all BP readings obtained by each method. A total of 626 participants were analyzed (age 52.8 +/- 12.0 years, 57.7% males, 33.1% treated). Systolic BPV was usually higher than diastolic BPV, and out-of-office BPV was higher than office BPV, with ambulatory BPV giving the highest values. BPV was higher in women than men, yet it was not different between untreated and treated individuals. Associations among BPV indices assessed using different measurement methods were weak (r 0.1-0.3) but were stronger between out-of-office BPV indices. The agreement between methods in detecting individuals with high BPV was low (30-40%) but was higher between out-of-office BPV indices. Older age was an independent determinant of increased OBP variability. Older age, female sex, smoking, and overweight/obesity were determinants of increased out-of-office BPV. These data suggest that BPV differs with different BP measurement methods, reflecting different pathophysiological phenomena, whereas the selection of the BPV index is less important. Office and out-of-office BP measurements appear to be complementary methods in assessing BPV.

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