Centro de Matemática, Computação e Cognição, Universidade Federal do ABC, São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Brazil
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Brazil
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Brazil
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Brazil
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Brazil
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo, São Bernardo do Campo, São Paulo, Brazil
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading causes of death, and blood pressure (BP) monitoring is essential for prevention, diagnosis, assessment, and treatment. Photoplethysmography (PPG) is a low-cost opto-electronic technique for BP measurement that allows the acquisition of a modulated light signal highly correlated with BP. There are several reports of methods to estimate BP from PPG with impressive results; in this study, we demonstrate that the previous results are excessively optimistic because of their train/test split configuration. To manage this limitation, we considered intra- and inter-subject data arrangements and demonstrated how they affect the results of feature-based BP estimation algorithms (i.e., XGBoost, LightGBM, and CatBoost) and signal-based algorithms (i.e., Residual U-Net, ResNet-18, and ResNet-LSTM). Inter-subject configuration performance is inferior to intra-subject configuration performance, regardless of the model. We also showed that, using only demographic attributes (i.e., age, sex, weight, and subject index number), a regression model achieved results comparable to those obtained in an intra-subject scenario.Although limited to a public clinical database, our findings suggest that algorithms that use an intra-subject setting without a calibration strategy may be learning to identify patients and not predict BP.