Smartphone Application-Assisted Home Blood Pressure Monitoring Compared With Office and Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Patients With Hypertension: the AMUSE-BP Study

Publication date

2022-10-01

Authors

Groenland, Eline H
Vendeville, Jean Paul A.C.
Bemelmans, Remy H.H.
Monajemi, Houshang
Bots, Michiel L.ORCID 0000-0003-2871-9810ISNI 0000000391893395
Visseren, Frank L JISNI 0000000389493675
Spiering, WilkoORCID 0000-0002-2493-6407

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Advisors

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Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The development of automated, smartphone application (app)-assisted home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) allows for standardized measurement of blood pressure (BP) at home. The aim of this study was to evaluate the (diagnostic) agreement between app-assisted HBPM, automated office BP (OBP), and the reference standard 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM). METHODS: In this open randomized 5-way cross-over study, patients diagnosed with hypertension were randomized to one of 10 clusters, each containing 5 BP measurement methods (ABPM, HBPM, attended OBP, unattended OBP, and unattended 30-minute BP) in different order. RESULTS: In total, 113 patients were included. The average 24-hour ABPM was 126±11/73±8 mm Hg compared with 141±14/82±10 mm Hg with app-assisted HBPM, 134±13/80±9 mm Hg with unattended 30-minute BP, 137±16/81±11 mm Hg with attended OBP, and 135±15/81±10 mm Hg with unattended OBP monitoring. Diagnostic agreement between app-assisted HBPM and 24-hour ABPM for diagnosing sustained (OBP >140/90 mm Hg and ABPM ≥130/80 mm Hg or HBPM ≥135/85 mm Hg), white-coat (OBP ≥140/90 mm Hg and ABPM <130/80 mm Hg or HBPM <135/85 mm Hg), and masked hypertension (OBP <140/90 mm Hg and ABPM ≥130/80 mm Hg or HBPM ≥135/85 mm Hg) was fair-to-moderate (κ statistics ranging from 0.34 to 0.40). App-assisted HBPM had high sensitivities (78%-91%) and negative predictive values (90%-97%) for diagnosing sustained and masked hypertension. CONCLUSIONS: This study showed a considerable (diagnostic) disagreement between app-assisted HBPM and ABPM. App-assisted HBPM had high sensitivity in the diagnosis of sustained and masked hypertension and may therefore be used as complementary to, but not a replacement of, ABPM.

Keywords

Blood Pressure, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory/methods, Cross-Over Studies, Humans, Hypertension/diagnosis, Masked Hypertension/diagnosis, Mobile Applications, Smartphone, Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial

Citation

Groenland, E H, Vendeville, J P A C, Bemelmans, R H H, Monajemi, H, Bots, M L, Visseren, F L J & Spiering, W 2022, 'Smartphone Application-Assisted Home Blood Pressure Monitoring Compared With Office and Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Patients With Hypertension : the AMUSE-BP Study', Hypertension, vol. 79, no. 10, pp. 2373-2382. https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.122.19685, https://doi.org/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.122.19685