|
|
||||||||
1 Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
2 Faculty of Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia
3 Centre for Statistics in Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, England, United Kingdom
CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Martin G. Dawes, MBBS, PhD, Department of Family Medicine, McGill University, 515 to 517, Pine Ave W, Montreal, QC, H2W 1S4, Canada, martin.dawes{at}mcgill.ca
Annals Journal Club selection—see inside back cover or http://www.annfammed.org/AJC/.
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
METHODS This prospective multicenter study of ambulatory BP monitoring included 48 family practices in the county of Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. Mortality was compared for patients having white coat hypertension (mean of 3 clinic BP readings >140/90 mm Hg and daytime ambulatory readings =135/85 mm Hg) and patients having sustained hypertension (mean of 3 clinic readings >140/90 mm Hg and daytime ambulatory readings >135/85 mm Hg).
RESULTS A routine primary care cohort consisting of 5,182 patients chosen to undergo ambulatory BP monitoring by their family physician was followed up for a median of 7.3 years (interquartile range, 5.8–8.9). There were 335 deaths (6.5%), corresponding to a mortality rate of 8.9 deaths (95% confidence interval [CI], 8.0–9.9) per 1,000 years of follow-up. Patients with white coat hypertension (n = 1,117) were more likely to be female and were on average younger than patients with sustained hypertension (n = 4,065). The unadjusted rate of all-cause mortality in patients with white coat hypertension was lower, at 4.4 deaths per 1,000 years of follow-up (95% CI, 3.1–6.0) than that in patients with sustained hypertension, at 10.2 deaths per 1,000 years of follow-up (95% CI, 9.1–11.4). This reduction in all-cause mortality was still clinically significant after adjustment for age, sex, smoking, use of antihypertensive medication, and practice-clustering effects (hazard ratio = 0.64; 95% CI, 0.42–0.97; P=.04).
CONCLUSIONS White coat hypertension (elevation of clinic BP only) confers significantly less risk of death than sustained hypertension (elevation of both clinic and ambulatory BPs). Trials are now needed to evaluate the risk reduction achievable in patients who have white coat hypertension and are receiving BP-lowering therapy.
Key Words: Hypertension white coat mortality primary care family practice ambulatory monitoring blood pressure practice-based research
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Ambulatory BP monitoring has been used for many years in secondary care as a way of assessing patients with elevated BP11 and as a tool in research on antihypertensive agents.12,13 Until recently, ambulatory monitoring has been mainly used in the research setting; however, the increasing availability, decreasing cost, and improved reliability of ambulatory BP machines have led to a dramatic increase in their use,14,15 including introduction of ambulatory BP monitoring into family practice over the last few years.16–21 In addition, such monitoring is now recommended practice for the assessment of BP within some guidelines.22
Comparisons between ambulatory BP and BP measured in clinics have shown better reliability for the former, with measures of ambulatory BP better predicting all-cause mortality as well as cardiovascular mortality.23–26
A considerable proportion of patients have normal ambulatory BP, but their BP readings are elevated when measured in the office, a phenomenon referred to as white coat hypertension.27,28 Its prevalence varies according to both clinic and ambulatory values used as thresholds to define this condition.20,28 White coat hypertension has been shown to be associated with less morbidity than hypertension that is sustained outside the clinic; however, no large, long-term follow-up studies have evaluated its impact on mortality in primary care.29–33
The aims of our study were to assess all-cause mortality in patients in whom BP monitoring was indicated and to compare all-cause mortality in patients with BP elevated only in the clinic (white coat hypertension) with that in patients with BP elevated both in the clinic and during ambulatory monitoring (sustained hypertension).
Our main hypothesis was that patients with white coat hypertension would have a significantly lower risk of all-cause mortality compared with patients with sustained hypertension. Secondary hypotheses tested in this study were the effects of sex, age, smoking, and use of antihypertensive medication at the time of monitoring on the risk associated with white coat hypertension. In addition, we investigated the same associations for cardiovascular mortality.
| METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Patient smoking status, current use of antihypertensive medication at the time of ambulatory BP monitoring, and sex were recorded by the office nurse at the time that patients were provided with the monitor. Personal identification data, including date of birth and the national health insurance number, were also collected and sent to the Office of National Statistics, which linked patient records with the death registry and provided the date of death. The primary outcome for our study was all-cause mortality. Cause of death or contributing cause of death was also identified from the death registry and classified as cardiovascular or noncardiovascular using codes from the International Classification of Diseases 9th Revision (ICD-9).
Patient data were collected from January 1, 1992, to February 28, 1997. Data from the death registry were obtained up until September 2003. Ethics approval for this study was granted by the Central Oxfordshire Research Ethics Committee of the Oxfordshire Health Authority.
Study Population
In 1992, the regional (Oxfordshire) health authority provided ambulatory BP monitors (TM-2420 monitors, version 7; A&D Engineering, Milpitas, California) to 52 family physician practices. Oxfordshire is an affluent county in southeast England with a mixture of rural regions and small cities, and a population of 631,900 (in 2006) in a land area of 2,605 km2. Most study practices were semirural and urban, covering mainly white populations in nondeprived areas. We invited all of the family physicians to provide data for the current study, and 48 (92%) agreed.
We retrieved data for 6,953 patients who had been selected for ambulatory BP monitoring based on the clinical judgment of their participating physicians. Physicians main reasons for initiating monitoring in the study patients were a variable clinic BP (35.9%), a borderline clinic BP (35.4%), established hypertension resistant to treatment (8.4%), and isolated high clinic BP (7.6%). The most common diagnostic hypertensive category for these patients (42.3%) was newly diagnosed hypertension with initiation of ambulatory monitoring before starting any treatment.
From this cohort, 1,771 patients were excluded. Forty-five patients did not have available mortality data, 22 were missing ambulatory readings, 783 had invalid ambulatory readings, and 596 had fewer than 3 clinic readings in the previous 6 months. There was no record of medication status in 515 patients and no record of smoking in 218. This process left a cohort of 5,182 patients. There was no difference in the available data for sex, age, clinic BP, ambulatory BP, smoking status, or antihypertensive medication use between patients included in and excluded from further analysis.
BP Measurement
Clinic BP was defined as the mean of the 3 most recent readings in the clinic during the previous 6 months, recorded using normal office techniques and equipment, before the patients underwent ambulatory BP monitoring.
Ambulatory BP was measured using monitors previously validated according to guidelines of the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation.34–36 All ambulatory recordings were assessed for inclusion in the analyses. Monitoring was done over a 24-hour period; BP was measured every half hour during the day (7 AM to 11 PM) and every hour during the night. All results were available to the family physicians. An ambulatory recording was defined as invalid if fewer than 20 valid daytime ambulatory measurements were obtained or if more than 15% of the readings were invalid (an error recorded by the monitor).
Of note, in contrast to the situation in some other settings, the nurses in this study were routinely involved in screening and management of hypertension and so were aware of the levels for BP management, which may have reduced the likelihood of threshold avoidance. As part of this study, nurses were encouraged to attend the research study update meetings where hypertension guidelines were routinely discussed.
Classification of Patients
On the basis of concordance of the clinic BP reading and the daytime (7 AM to 11 PM) ambulatory BP recordings, patients were grouped into 1 of 2 categories determined from current hypertension guidelines37: (1) white coat hypertension (defined as a clinic systolic BP >140 mm Hg and daytime ambulatory systolic =135 mm Hg, and/or clinic diastolic BP >90 mm Hg and daytime ambulatory diastolic BP =85 mm Hg) or (2) sustained hypertension (defined as clinic systolic BP >140 mm Hg and daytime ambulatory systolic BP >135 mm Hg, and/or clinic diastolic BP >90 mm Hg and daytime ambulatory diastolic BP >85 mm Hg). In all, 1,117 patients had white coat hypertension and 4,065 patients had sustained hypertension.
Statistical Analysis
We performed data entry and validation using DBase IV software (dataBased Intelligence Inc, Vestal, New York). Analysis was performed using version 11.0 of SPSS for Windows (SPSS Inc, Chicago, Illinois) and version 9.2 of Stata (Stata Corp, College Station, Texas). Patient characteristics and BP measures were summarized using frequencies (percentages) for binary variables, means with standard deviations (SDs) for normally distributed continuous variables, or medians with range or interquartile range (IQR) for nonnormally distributed continuous variables. We compared these characteristics using the
2 test for binary variables and the independent 2-sample t test for normally distributed continuous variables. To assess the potential effect of clustering by practice on outcome, the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was calculated. Multivariate survival analysis was performed using the Cox regression model to evaluate the risk of mortality associated with white coat hypertension compared with sustained hypertension, adjusting for important prognostic factors including sex, age, smoking history, and prescribed antihypertensive medication recorded at the time of monitoring, and also for clustering at the practice level.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
There were statistically significant and clinically important differences in these risk factors between the patients with white coat hypertension and the patients with sustained hypertension (Table 1
). The former patients were more likely to be female, were on average younger, and were less likely to be smokers, all of which would reduce their risk of mortality. They were also marginally more likely than their counterparts with sustained hypertension to already be taking antihypertensive medication when monitoring began, although this difference was neither clinically nor conventionally statistically significant.
|
|
Mortality
The mean length of follow-up for the patients overall was 7.3 years (SD, 2.0), and the median length of follow-up was 7.3 years (IQR, 5.8–8.9). Patients with white coat hypertension were followed up for a mean of 7.4 years (SD, 1.9), and those with sustained hypertension were followed up for a mean of 7.2 years (SD, 2.0).
Some 36 (3.2%) of the patients with white coat hypertension and 299 (7.4%) of the patients with sustained hypertension died. When patients were categorized by clinic and ambulatory systolic BP quartiles, the number of deaths was greatest in the patients with higher clinic BP; in addition, within that group, the number increased significantly with increasing ambulatory BP.
The overall mortality rate was 8.9 deaths per 1,000 years of patient follow-up (95% CI, 8.0–9.9). Crude rates of all-cause mortality were significantly lower in patients with white coat hypertension, at 4.4 deaths (95% CI, 3.1–6.0) per 1,000 years, compared with patients with sustained hypertension, at 10.2 deaths (95% CI, 9.1–11.4) per 1,000 years (P <.001) (Table 3
).
|
In 18 (50.0%) of the 36 patients with white coat hypertension who died and 151 (50.5%) of the 299 patients with sustained hypertension who died, death was due to cardiovascular causes. The crude rate of cardiovascular mortality per 1,000 years of patient follow-up was significantly lower in patients with white coat hypertension, at 2.2 deaths (95% CI, 1.4–3.5), than in patients with sustained hypertension, at 5.3 deaths (95% CI, 4.5–6.2) (P <.01).
The risk of all-cause mortality of patients with white coat hypertension was clinically and statistically significantly lower than that of patients with sustained hypertension, after adjusting for the independent risk factors of age, sex, smoking status, and antihypertensive medication use, and for clustering (hazard ratio, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.42–0.97; P=.04) (Table 4
). This difference corresponds to an estimated 36% lower risk of death, adjusting for important covariates. In addition, patients with white coat hypertension had a similar estimated 37% lower risk of cardiovascular mortality relative to their counterparts with sustained hypertension.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Ambulatory BP recording in primary care has recently been recommended as a method of assessing BP in patients thought to be hypertensive.37 Our study shows that it is possible within routine primary care to monitor patients BP using an ambulatory monitor. The high percentage of technically satisfactory recordings we obtained was largely due to the expertise of the practice nurses who were responsible for attaching the monitor to patients and instructing patients in its use.
Many studies have shown that BP readings measured using ambulatory monitors are lower than clinic readings41 and that the risk of death associated with ambulatory BP is lower than that associated with clinic BP23; however, the precise levels of ambulatory BP that should be considered equivalent to recognized cutoffs for clinic BP in terms of risk or benefit from antihypertensive treatment remain uncertain. Clear epidemiologic evidence shows that the treatment of mild to moderate hypertension detected in the clinic reduces cardiovascular endpoints by as much as 50% but has less effect on all-cause mortality.42,43
There are limitations to this study. We undertook a pragmatic longitudinal study carried out in normal practice settings. Patients were selected opportunistically by the physicians and as such may not have represented the total population of patients within these practices. Finally, some important predictors of mortality, such as cholesterol, were not available in this analysis because of the nature of the study.
The implication of this research for family medicine is that we need to consider evaluating patients in greater depth before starting treatment for hypertension. Currently, the guidelines recommend an evaluation of global cardiovascular risk to guide treatment recommendations. We need to now reconsider whether to stop using office BP as both the routine screening test and the diagnostic test for hypertension.
Subsequent controlled clinical trials in primary care would be needed to test the benefits of interventions at different thresholds of ambulatory BP. These studies are now indicated.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Funding support: This research was supported by funding from a UK National Health Service Research & Development grant and from the CVD & Stroke Programme.
Received for publication August 24, 2007. Revision received March 10, 2008. Accepted for publication March 13, 2008.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. C. Stange In this Issue: Access to Care, Spirituality, and Relevant Research Ann. Fam. Med, September 1, 2008; 6(5): 386 - 387. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |