Stabroek News Sunday

Home blood pressure monitors may not be accurate enough

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(Reuters Health) – Even as doctors are increasing­ly relying on home blood pressure monitoring to manage patients with hypertensi­on, many of the devices are too inaccurate to be useful, according to a small study.

About 70 per cent of the time, home monitors weren’t accurate within 5 mmHg, which is considered clinically important, researcher­s say. And 30 per cent of the time the devices were 10 mmHg off the mark.

Hypertensi­on, or high blood pressure, “is the number one cause of death and disability in the world,” said lead study author Jennifer Ringrose of the University of Alberta in Canada.

“Guidelines are recommendi­ng that clinicians rely more on automatic and home blood pressure readings to diagnose and monitor high blood pressure,” she told Reuters Health by email. “We need to make sure these home blood pressure readings are accurate.”

Ringrose and colleagues gauged the accuracy of home blood pressure monitors used by 85 patients and tested for difference­s between upper-arm versus wrist devices, brand names, hard versus soft cuffs and devices that were validated according to industry technical standards and those that were not.

Two observers tested each patient simultaneo­usly, taking a total of nine blood pressure measuremen­ts and alternatin­g between the device used at home and a standardiz­ed cuff used in a doctor’s office.

Blood pressure is measured with two numbers: systolic pressure when the heart pumps blood and diastolic pressure when the heart rests between beats. Blood pressure below 120 mmHg systolic/80 mmHg diastolic is considered healthy. Pressure above 140/90 mmHg is considered high.

The researcher­s found that home monitors were more often wrong for systolic pressure. For 54 per cent of patients, that measuremen­t differed by 5 mmHg from the profession­al device. For 20 per cent, it was wrong by 10 mmHg, and for 7 per cent it was off by 15 mmHg or more. With diastolic pressure, the same was true of 31 per cent, 12 per cent and 1 per cent of patients.

Arm size and gender were the main predictors of a systolic blood pressure difference, with men typically having a larger discrepanc­y, the researcher­s found. Also, older age, larger arm circumfere­nce, hard cuff design, and older device models were linked with diastolic blood pressure discrepanc­y.

Age and stiffness of blood vessels, for example, can make a significan­t difference if blood pressure monitors aren’t calibrated for the patient using it, the study authors write in the American Journal of Hypertensi­on.

“There can be substantia­l error, even in devices that have been tested in a validation study,” said senior study author Raj Padwal of the Mazankowsk­i Heart Institute in Alberta.

“A major issue is that it is hard to study why inaccuraci­es occur because the algorithm that these devices use to determine blood pressure is proprietar­y and kept secret by each company,” Padwal said by email.

The research team suggests creating a third-party way for both doctors and patients to check home devices, if needed.

“First, patients should purchase a validated monitor and use the proper sized cuff,” Padwal said. “Second, we - device makers and academic researcher­s - have to come up with more accurate devices.”

They also suggest making diagnostic and treatment decisions based on the average of multiple measuremen­ts. Canadian guidelines, for example, recommend 28 measuremen­ts during one week for home devices, and changes in medication should be based on more than a few measuremen­ts.

“The market for this equipment is rising dramatical­ly into the billions in the next couple of years as patients age, and more doctors are using them to diagnose and manage hypertensi­on,” said Marcel Ruzicka of the University of Ottawa who co-wrote a commentary accompanyi­ng the study.

“As health care providers, we’re becoming more dependent on the numbers that patients are bringing to us, and in a busy office where you can’t get a true resting blood pressure, those may be the only numbers you have,” he told Reuters Health.

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