Home blood pressure during night-time sleep - a feasible treatment target for patients with hypertension: a proof-of-concept randomised controlled trial.

IF 3.3 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice Pub Date : 2025-02-14 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1080/20523211.2025.2463435
Eric Kam-Pui Lee, Shuqi Wang, Benjamin Hon-Kei Yip, Esther Yee-Tak Yu, Shuk-Yun Leung, Jinghao Han, Yue-Kwan Choi, Kam-Fai Chow, Wai-Ho Chung, Byran P Yan, Anastasia S Mihailidou, Richard J McManus, Samuel Yeung-Shan Wong
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: This trial assessed the feasibility of titrating evening dosing of anti-hypertensive medications based on nighttime home blood pressure measurement (HBPM) readings in primary care for hypertensive (HT) patients.

Methods: 78 patients with nocturnal HT and stage I daytime HT were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either nighttime HBPM measurements (intervention group) or daytime HBPM measurements (control group). Nighttime blood pressure (BP) was measured 3x per night for at least two nights over 1 week using an automatic and validated HBPM device. The intervention group and control group aimed to achieve systolic BP <120 mmHg on nocturnal HBPM and systolic BP <135 mmHg on daytime HBPM respectively. All patients were seen every four weeks and followed the same drug titration algorithm.

Results: The trial achieved a recruitment rate of 6.5 persons per month and a retention rate of 96.1%. In the intervention group, patients provided ≥6 (considered adequate) and ≥9 nighttime HBPM readings for 77.5% and 63.8% of their follow-ups, respectively. At 6-month, both groups had similar nighttime, 24-hour, and daytime BP on ambulatory BP monitoring, as well as similar numbers of non-dippers and healthcare utilisation. Most patients reported that they learned more from their HBPM nighttime readings and found the intervention well-tolerated.

Conclusion: Adjusting evening dosage of anti-HT medications based on nighttime HBPM is a potential and feasible treatment approach for patients with nocturnal HT in primary care. This approach is well-accepted by patients and results in at least non-inferior BP control. Although titrating medications according to nighttime HBPM readings may improve nighttime BP, the small sample size limited statistical significance and the single-centre design restricted generalizability. Additionally, a few patients exhibited fair adherence to nighttime HBPM. Further randomised controlled trials are required to confirm that targeting nocturnal BP should be the primary treatment goal for HT.

夜间睡眠期间的家庭血压-高血压患者的可行治疗目标:一项概念验证的随机对照试验。
背景:本试验评估了基于夜间家庭血压测量(HBPM)读数在高血压(HT)患者的初级保健中滴定晚间抗高血压药物剂量的可行性。方法:78例夜间HT和I期日间HT患者按1:1的比例随机分配到夜间HBPM测量组(干预组)或白天HBPM测量组(对照组)。夜间血压(BP)测量每晚3次,持续至少2晚,持续1周。干预组和对照组均以达到收缩压为目标。结果:试验每月招募率为6.5人,保留率为96.1%。在干预组中,77.5%和63.8%的随访患者分别提供≥6(被认为足够)和≥9的夜间HBPM读数。在6个月时,两组在动态血压监测中有相似的夜间、24小时和白天血压,以及相似的非潜水者数量和医疗保健利用率。大多数患者报告说,他们从夜间HBPM读数中了解到更多,并发现这种干预措施耐受性良好。结论:根据夜间HBPM调整夜间抗HT药物剂量是一种潜在可行的治疗夜间HT的方法。这种方法被患者广泛接受,至少可以达到良好的血压控制。虽然根据夜间HBPM读数滴定药物可以改善夜间血压,但样本量小,统计意义有限,单中心设计也限制了推广。此外,少数患者表现出夜间HBPM的良好依从性。需要进一步的随机对照试验来证实针对夜间血压应该是HT的主要治疗目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice
Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice Health Professions-Pharmacy
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
9.50%
发文量
81
审稿时长
14 weeks
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