Telemedicine-guided home blood pressure monitoring and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring showed good agreement and were equally effective in assessing daytime blood pressure.
Observational (n=57)
No
Does telemedicine-guided home blood pressure monitoring provide comparable blood pressure assessment to 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in patients with and without chronic kidney disease?
Telemedicine-guided home blood pressure monitoring is equally effective as 24-hour ambulatory monitoring for assessing daytime blood pressure and is significantly preferred by patients.
Absolute Event Rate: 128% vs 129%
Background. Only few direct comparative studies evaluated the effectiveness of telemedicine-guided home blood pressure (tele-HBPM) compared to 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) in assessing blood pressure (BP) and BP control. Material and methods. This prospective clinical trial included patients with arterial hypertension, with (n = 23) and without (n = 18) chronic kidney disease and normal volunteers (n = 16). All subjects underwent with a 1-month interval twice one-week of BP monitoring with office BP (3 measurements at 2 visits), 24 h-ABPM and tele-HBPM during 7 consecutive days. Results. Mean (SD) BP levels were 128/77 19/11 mm Hg and 126/75 14/9 mm Hg for tele-HBPM, 129/78 17/11 mm Hg and 127/75 14/9 mm Hg for daytime-ABPM, and 133/77 23/12 mm Hg and 130/74 17/11 mm Hg for office BP, all respectively at the first and the second measurement periods. Blood pressure and BP control were comparable between the two out-of-office techniques. Conclusion. Both out-of-office techniques (tele-HBPM and 24h-ABPM) show good agreement for systolic as well as diastolic BP, and are equally effective in assessing BP and BP control, explicitly during daytime.
Galloo et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Arterial hypertension with and without chronic kidney disease (n=57). Telemedicine-guided home blood pressure monitoring (tele-HBPM) vs. 24 h-ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) was evaluated on Mean daytime systolic blood pressure (mm Hg) at first measurement period. Telemedicine-guided home blood pressure monitoring and 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring showed good agreement and were equally effective in assessing daytime blood pressure.