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Wearable Blood Pressure Devices to Identify Masked Uncontrolled Hypertension.

N

National Taiwan University Hospital Hsin-Chu Branch

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Hypertension,Essential
Hypertension, Masked

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04863508
109-029-E

Details and patient eligibility

About

Uncontrolled out-of-office blood pressure (BP), measured by either home BP monitoring (HBPM) or ambulatory BP monitoring, has been shown to predict higher cardiovascular risk. However, HBPM could not identify daytime BP surge, which leads to underestimation of future risk among treated hypertensive individuals.

HeartGuide provides validated out-of-office BP measurements, along with activity/sleep recordings. The present study is designed to examine whether BP monitoring with the HeartGuide could identify masked uncontrolled hypertension in controlled hypertensive patients based on office BP. We will enroll hypertensive patients with controlled office BP according to their cardiovascular risk profile. We will also examine prevalence of post-prandial BP changes and BP variability using HeartGuide.

Full description

Recent hypertension guidelines stressed the importance of out-of-office BP monitoring. Ambulatory BP (ABPM) and home BP monitoring (HBPM) both predict future cardiovascular events better than office BP. Masked hypertension is an important issue. As revealed by recent studies, daytime BP surge can result in greater target organ damage for high-risk hypertensive individuals.

Previous trials such as TASMINH2 and TASMINH-SR study showed positive effects of HBPM on BP control in hypertensive patients. However, several issues preclude perfect applications of HBPM. For example, HBPM could not provide BP recordings during activity or at night-time. In addition, the currently recommended time schedule for HBPM may be insufficient for detecting daytime surge especially among high-risk individuals. Wearable BP devices seem to fill in this gap as a novel approach of out-of-office monitoring.

HeartGuide, the new watch BP monitor, was recently validated to provide accurate BP measurements. It could provide incremental knowledge with potentially larger numbers of recordings. The primary objective of this study is to unveil uncontrolled masked hypertension with HeartGuide, particularly for those undetected with current office BP and HBPM. A second objective is to assess diurnal BP trends and BP variability.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

30 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Willing to sign informed consent form
  • Currently taking anti-hypertensive therapy for more than 3 months
  • Drugs are unchanged during the study period
  • Office BP below 140/90 mmHg at least one visit

Exclusion criteria

  • Diagnosed with terminal illness
  • End-stage renal disease requiring lifelong dialysis treatment
  • Patients with impaired performance status (ECOG >= 2)
  • Women undergoing or expecting pregnancy during the study period
  • Resistant hypertension (taking more than 4 kinds of anti-hypertensive drugs)
  • Known atrial or ventricular arrhythmia
  • Wrist circumference out-of range between 13.5 to 21.5 cm

Trial design

90 participants in 3 patient groups

Low-risk hypertensive patients
Description:
Patients without diabetes, chronic kidney disease, hypertension-mediated organ damage, or established cardiovascular diseases
With-risk hypertensive patients
Description:
Patients with diabetes, chronic kidney disease, hypertension-mediated organ damage, but without established cardiovascular diseases
Hypertensive patients with cardiovascular diseases
Description:
Patients with established cardiovascular diseases

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Hengyu Pan, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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