Does a sit-to-stand manoeuvre with specific blood pressure cut-offs accurately diagnose orthostatic hypotension compared to a standard supine-to-standing test in patients and healthy controls?
A sit-to-stand test with lower diagnostic cut-offs (SBP drop ≥15 mmHg or DBP drop ≥7 mmHg) is a valid and simple screening alternative to the standard supine-to-standing test for diagnosing orthostatic hypotension.
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to identify optimal blood pressure cut-offs to diagnose orthostatic hypotension during a sit-to-stand manoeuvre. METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study of patients and healthy controls from the Vanderbilt Autonomic Dysfunction Center. Blood pressure was measured while supine, seated and standing. Blood pressure changes were calculated from supine-to-standing and seated-to-standing. Orthostatic hypotension was diagnosed on the basis of a supine-to-standing SBP drop at least 20 mmHg or a DBP drop at least 10 mmHg. Receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curves identified optimal sit-to-stand cut-offs. RESULTS: Amongst the 831 individuals, more had systolic orthostatic hypotension n = 354 (43%) than diastolic orthostatic hypotension n = 305 (37%) during lying-to-standing. The ROC curves had good characteristics SBP area under curve = 0.916 (95% confidence interval: 0.896-0.936), P < 0.001; DBP area under curve = 0.930 (95% confidence interval: 0.909-0.950), P < 0.001. A sit-to stand SBP drop at least 15 mmHg had optimal test characteristics (sensitivity = 80.2%; specificity = 88.9%; positive predictive value = 84.2%; negative predictive value = 85.8%), as did a DBP drop at least 7 mmHg (sensitivity = 87.2%; specificity = 87.2%; positive predictive value = 80.1%; negative predictive value = 92.0%). CONCLUSIONS: A sit-to-stand manoeuvre with lower diagnostic cut-offs for orthostatic hypotension provides a simple screening test for orthostatic hypotension in situations wherein a supine-to-standing manoeuvre cannot be easily performed. Our analysis suggests that a SBP drop at least 15 mmHg or a DBP drop at least 7 mmHg best optimizes sensitivity and specificity of this sit-to-stand test.
Shaw et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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