Superiority of Ambulatory Over Clinic Blood Pressure Measurement in Predicting Mortality

Eamon Dolan(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Alice Stanton(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Lutgarde Thijs(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Kareem Hinedi(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Neil Atkins(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Sean P. McClory(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Elly Den Hond(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Patricia McCormack(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Jan A. Staessen(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), Eoin OʼBrien(Providence St. Vincent Medical Center)
Hypertension
June 7, 2005
Cited by 1,228Open Access
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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine if ambulatory blood pressure measurement predicted total and cardiovascular mortality over and beyond clinic blood pressure measurement and other cardiovascular risk factors; 5292 untreated hypertensive patients referred to a single blood pressure clinic who had clinic and ambulatory blood pressure measurement at baseline were followed up in a prospective study of mortality outcome. Multiple Cox regression was used to model time to total and cause-specific mortality for ambulatory blood pressure measurement while adjusting for clinic blood pressure measurement and other risk factors at baseline. There were 646 deaths (of which 389 were cardiovascular) during a median follow-up period of 8.4 years. With adjustment for gender, age, risk indices, and clinic blood pressure, higher mean values of ambulatory blood pressure were independent predictors for cardiovascular mortality. The relative hazard ratio for each 10-mm Hg increase in systolic blood pressure was 1.12 (1.06 to 1.18; P<0.001) for daytime and 1.21 (1.15 to 1.27; P<0.001) for nighttime systolic blood pressure. The hazard ratios for each 5-mm Hg increase in diastolic blood pressure were 1.02 (0.99 to 1.07; P=NS) for daytime and 1.09 (1.04 to 1.13; P<0.01) for nighttime diastolic pressures. The hazard ratios for nighttime ambulatory blood pressure remained significant after adjustment for daytime ambulatory blood pressure. These results have 2 important clinical messages: ambulatory measurement of blood pressure is superior to clinic measurement in predicting cardiovascular mortality, and nighttime blood pressure is the most potent predictor of outcome.


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