Studies comparing ambulatory blood pressure and home blood pressure on cardiovascular disease and mortality outcomes: a systematic review

Journal of the American Society of Hypertension : JASH
Daichi ShimboPaul Muntner

Abstract

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is more commonly recommended for assessing out-of-clinic blood pressure (BP) than home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM). We conducted a systematic review to examine whether ABPM or HBPM is more strongly associated with cardiovascular disease events and/or mortality. Of 1007 abstracts published through July 20, 2015, nine articles, reporting results from seven cohorts, were identified. After adjustment for BP on HBPM, BP on ABPM was associated with an increased risk of outcomes in two of four cohorts for systolic blood pressure and two of three cohorts for diastolic blood pressure. After adjustment for BP on ABPM, systolic blood pressure on HBPM was associated with outcomes in zero of three cohorts; an association was present in one of two cohorts for diastolic blood pressure on HBPM. There is a lack of strong empiric evidence supporting ABPM or HBPM over the other approach for predicting cardiovascular events or mortality.

References

Jan 8, 1988·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·T G PickeringJ H Laragh
Dec 7, 2002·Hypertension·Thomas G PickeringJoseph E Schwartz
Nov 25, 2006·American Journal of Nephrology·Rajiv Agarwal, Martin J Andersen
Oct 19, 2007·Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN·Pooneh AlborziRajiv Agarwal
Oct 26, 2007·American Journal of Nephrology·Rajiv AgarwalRobert P Light
Jul 8, 2009·Hypertension·Gianfranco ParatiGrzegorz Bilo
Jan 20, 2010·Hypertension·Rajiv Agarwal
Jun 4, 2010·Journal of Human Hypertension·G ParatiUNKNOWN ESH Working Group on Blood Pressure Monitoring
Aug 27, 2011·BMJ : British Medical Journal·Taryn KrauseUNKNOWN Guideline Development Group
Apr 19, 2013·Hypertension Research : Official Journal of the Japanese Society of Hypertension·Yutaka ImaiTakayoshi Ohkubo
Sep 14, 2013·Journal of Hypertension·Eoin O'BrienUNKNOWN European Society of Hypertension Working Group on Blood Pressure Monitoring
May 21, 2014·Hypertension·Teemu J NiiranenAntti M Jula
Oct 13, 2015·Annals of Internal Medicine·Albert L Siu, UNKNOWN U.S. Preventive Services Task Force

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Citations

Oct 27, 2017·Current Hypertension Reports·D Edmund AnsteyDaichi Shimbo
May 12, 2018·Circulation. Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes·Matthew F MuldoonDaichi Shimbo
Oct 27, 2018·Current Hypertension Reports·Natalie A BelloAlan T Tita
Jun 23, 2020·Circulation·Daichi ShimboUNKNOWN American Heart Association and the American Medical Association
Jul 19, 2020·Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN·Jay A PanditDaniel Batlle
Apr 6, 2019·Current Hypertension Reports·D Edmund AnsteyMarwah Abdalla
May 4, 2020·High Blood Pressure & Cardiovascular Prevention : the Official Journal of the Italian Society of Hypertension·Vincenzo CesarioGiuliano Tocci
Nov 11, 2020·International Journal of Stroke : Official Journal of the International Stroke Society·Alastair Js WebbPeter M Rothwell
Feb 7, 2021·Diagnostics·Annina S Vischer, Thilo Burkard
Dec 19, 2020·Journal of the American College of Cardiology·Robert M Carey, Thomas H Marwick
Dec 19, 2020·Journal of the American College of Cardiology·Joseph E SchwartzDaichi Shimbo
Feb 17, 2021·Stroke; a Journal of Cerebral Circulation·Alastair J S WebbUNKNOWN Oxford Vascular Study Phenotyped Cohort
Jan 27, 2019·Journal of the American College of Cardiology·Paul MuntnerUNKNOWN 2017 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Working Group
Mar 1, 2018·Journal of the American Society of Hypertension : JASH·Robert B SchonbergerMatthew M Burg
Apr 28, 2021·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Janelle M Guirguis-BlakeMeghan Soulsby Weyrich
Jun 2, 2021·Current Opinion in Cardiology·Robert M Carey, Paul K Whelton
Jul 17, 2021·Journal of Hypertension·Gianfranco ParatiUNKNOWN Working Group on Blood Pressure Monitoring and Cardiovascular Variability of the European Society of Hypertension

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Cardiovascular Disease Pathophysiology

Cardiovascular disease involves several different processes that contribute to the pathological mechanism, including hyperglycemia, inflammation, atherosclerosis, hypertension and more. Vasculature stability plays a critical role in the development of the disease. Discover the latest research on cardiovascular disease pathophysiology here.