Remote blood pressure monitoring and intervention significantly improved systolic blood pressure control at 6-12 months compared to usual care in 9 out of 12 included studies.
Systematic Review
Does remote blood pressure monitoring and intervention improve systolic blood pressure control in patients with hypertension compared to usual care?
Remote blood pressure monitoring and intervention is a time-effective and cost-effective strategy that improves systolic blood pressure control and quality of life compared to usual in-person care.
Introduction/Background: Hypertension is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. Despite treatment recommendations and encouragement of lifestyle changes, the actual rate of blood pressure control is still not at par. Remote intervention methods have been shown to achieve better rates of blood pressure control utilising lesser resources and lower healthcare costs. We conducted a systematic review by qualitatively evaluating the potential impact of remote monitoring and interventions compared to usual care in controlling Hypertension. Research Question: Are remote monitoring techniques and interventions better than usual in-person blood pressure checks for hypertension control? Methods: We did a comprehensive literature search of Pubmed/MEDLINE, Google scholar, Cochrane central Library, PLOS ONE, ScienceDirect and Clinicaltrials.gov to identify eligible randomised control trials and clinical trials published between July 2013 and May 2025. A Risk of Bias assessment was conducted using Cochrane Risk of Bias tools such as ROB-2 for randomised control trials and ROBINS-1 for cohort studies. This study follows the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Results: Of the 5,185 records analysed, 10 randomised control trials, 1 cohort study and 1 implementation study satisfied our inclusion criteria. Compared to usual care, remote monitoring methods showed significant difference in systolic blood pressure control at 6-12 months in 9 out of 12 studies, while 3 studies did not show any significant difference. Quality of life, physical health, mental health and drug compliance have also shown a significant positive difference in patients. Remote self monitoring interventions were found to be more cost-effective than usual care. They also reduced the load of patients seeking appointments for hypertension control thereby improving the quality of patient care. Conclusion: The management of clinical hypertension is a challenging entity. Conventional methods of regular in-office blood pressure checks are both tedious and resource consuming. Using remote monitoring methods have shown to significantly improve blood pressure control compared to routine methods. It also eliminates white-coat hypertension during follow-up blood pressure checks which leads to more appropriate interventions. Remote monitoring and intervention for hypertension control is time-effective, cost-effective and improves quality of life.
Meda et al. (Tue,) conducted a systematic review in Hypertension. Remote blood pressure monitoring and intervention vs. Usual care was evaluated on Systolic blood pressure control. Remote blood pressure monitoring and intervention significantly improved systolic blood pressure control at 6-12 months compared to usual care in 9 out of 12 included studies.