A 1-month ICT-enabled integrated home care program significantly reduced office systolic blood pressure from 162.40 to 138.20 mm Hg (p<0.01) in patients with difficult-to-control hypertension.
Observational (n=20)
No
Does an ICT-enabled integrated care program reduce systolic blood pressure in patients with difficult-to-control hypertension?
An ICT-enabled integrated home care program significantly reduced systolic blood pressure in patients with difficult-to-control hypertension over a 4-week period without changing medical therapy.
Absolute Event Rate: 138.2% vs 162.4%
p-value: p=<0.01
Difficult-to-control (DTC) hypertension represents a burden in real life that can be partially solved through identification of the characteristics of clinical patterns and tailoring antihypertensive strategies, including ICT-enabled integrated care (ICT-IC). In the quest for clinical predictors of DTC hypertension, we screened 482 hypertensive patients who were consecutively referred to the departmental hypertension clinic. Following a data quality check, patients were divided into controlled (C, 49.37%) and uncontrolled (UC, 50.63%) groups based on their systolic blood pressure (BP) at follow-up. We then performed statistical analysis on the demographic, clinical, laboratory, and ultrasound data and observed that older age, female sex, higher BP levels, and a family history of hypertension were predictors of DTC hypertension. We then developed a pilot service of ICT-IC, including weekly home visits by nurses and patient education on self-monitoring of BP, heart rate, body weight, and oxygen saturation using 3G-connected devices. Self-monitored data were transmitted to the hospital servers on the electronic chart of the patient for remote assessment by the hospital hypertension specialists. A total of 20 UC patients (M/F = 10/10; age: 72.04 ± 2.17 years) were enrolled to verify the efficacy of BP control without changes in medical treatment. After 1 month of the ICT-IC program, BP was reduced both at the office assessment (systolic BP (SBP): 162.40 ± 2.23 mm Hg, beginning of the program vs. 138.20 ± 4.26 mm Hg at 1 month, p < 0.01) and at home (SBP: 149.83 ± 3.44, beginning of the program vs. 134.16 ± 1.67 mm Hg at 1 month, p < 0.01). We concluded that DTC hypertension can be predicted based on the clinical characteristics at the first visit. For these patients, ICT-IC is a feasible therapeutic strategy to achieve BP control.
Visco et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Difficult-to-control hypertension (n=20). ICT-enabled integrated home care (ICT-IC) vs. Usual care (baseline values) was evaluated on Office systolic blood pressure at 1 month (p=<0.01). A 1-month ICT-enabled integrated home care program significantly reduced office systolic blood pressure from 162.40 to 138.20 mm Hg (p<0.01) in patients with difficult-to-control hypertension.