Annals of Medicine (Jan 2021)

Unattended compared to traditional blood pressure measurement in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a randomised cross-over study

  • Elena Bartoloni,
  • Fabio Angeli,
  • Elisa Marcucci,
  • Carlo Perricone,
  • Giacomo Cafaro,
  • Clara Riccini,
  • Lorenzo Spighi,
  • Benedetta Gildoni,
  • Claudio Cavallini,
  • Paolo Verdecchia,
  • Roberto Gerli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2021.1999493
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 1
pp. 2050 – 2059

Abstract

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AbstractBackground Hypertension is characterised by a high prevalence, low awareness and poor control among rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. Correct blood pressure (BP) measurement is highly important in these subjects. The “unattended” BP measurement aims to reduce the “white-coat effect,” a phenomenon associated with cardiovascular risk. Data on “unattended” BP measurement in RA and its impact on hypertensive organ damage are very limited.Methods BP was measured in the same patient both traditionally (“attended” BP) and by the “unattended” protocol (3 automated office BP measurements, at 1-min intervals, after 5 min of rest, with patient left alone) by a randomised cross-over design. Patients underwent clinical examination, 12-lead electrocardiography and trans-thoracic echocardiography to evaluate cardiac damage.Results Sixty-two RA patients (mean age 67 ± 9 years, 87% women) were enrolled. Hypertension was diagnosed in 79% and 66% of patients according to ACC/AHA and ESC/ESH criteria, respectively. Concordance correlation coefficients between the two techniques were 0.55 (95%, CI 0.38–0.68) for systolic BP and 0.73 (95%, CI 0.60–0.82) for diastolic BP. “Unattended” (121.7/68.6 mmHg) was lower than “attended” BP (130.5/72.8 mmHg) for systolic and diastolic BP (both p < .0001). Among the two techniques, only “unattended” systolic BP showed a significant association with left ventricular mass (r = 0.11; p = .40 for “attended” BP; r = 0.27; p = .036 for unattended BP; difference between slopes: z = 3.92; p = .0001).Conclusions In RA patients, “unattended” BP is lower than traditional (“attended”) BP and more closely associated with LV mass. In these patients, the “unattended” automated BP measurement is a promising tool which requires further evaluation.KEY MESSAGES“Unattended” automated blood pressure registration, aimed to reduce the “white-coat effect” is lower than “attended” value in rheumatoid arthritis patients.“Unattended” blood pressure is more closely associated with left ventricular mass than “attende” registration.

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