Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) can measure 24-hour blood pressure (BP), including nocturnal BP and diurnal variations. This feature of ABPM could be of value in Asian populations for preventing cardiovascular events. However, no study has yet investigated regarding the use of ABPM in ac...

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Main Authors: Shin, Jinho, Kario, Kazuomi, Chia, Yook-Chin, Turana, Yuda, Chen, Chen-Huan, Buranakitjaroen, Peera, Divinagracia, Romeo, Nailes, Jennifer, Hoshide, Satoshi, Siddique, Saulat, Sison, Jorge, Soenarta, Arieska Ann, Sogunuru, Guru Prasad, Tay, Jam Chin, Teo, Boon Wee, Zhang, Yu-Qing, Park, Sungha, Minh, Huynh Van, Kabutoya, Tomoyuki, Verma, Narsingh, Wang, Tzung-Dau, Wang, Ji-Guang
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Published: Wiley 2020
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/37240/
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spelling my.um.eprints.372402023-03-09T06:39:49Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/37240/ Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network Shin, Jinho Kario, Kazuomi Chia, Yook-Chin Turana, Yuda Chen, Chen-Huan Buranakitjaroen, Peera Divinagracia, Romeo Nailes, Jennifer Hoshide, Satoshi Siddique, Saulat Sison, Jorge Soenarta, Arieska Ann Sogunuru, Guru Prasad Tay, Jam Chin Teo, Boon Wee Zhang, Yu-Qing Park, Sungha Minh, Huynh Van Kabutoya, Tomoyuki Verma, Narsingh Wang, Tzung-Dau Wang, Ji-Guang R Medicine (General) Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) can measure 24-hour blood pressure (BP), including nocturnal BP and diurnal variations. This feature of ABPM could be of value in Asian populations for preventing cardiovascular events. However, no study has yet investigated regarding the use of ABPM in actual clinical settings in Asian countries/regions. In this study, 11 experts from 11 countries/regions were asked to answer questionnaires regarding the use of ABPM. We found that its use was very limited in primary care settings and almost exclusively available in referral settings. The indications of ABPM in actual clinical settings were largely similar to those of home BP monitoring (HBPM), that is, diagnosis of white-coat or masked hypertension and more accurate BP measurement for borderline clinic BP. Other interesting indications, such as nighttime BP patterns, including non-dipper BP, morning BP surge, and BP variability, were hardly adopted in daily clinical practice. The use of ABPM as treatment guidance for detecting treated but uncontrolled hypertension in the Asian countries/regions didn't seem to be common. The barrier to the use of ABPM was primarily its availability; in referral centers, patient reluctance owing to discomfort or sleep disturbance was the most frequent barrier. ABPM use was significantly more economical when it was reimbursed by public insurance. To facilitate ABPM use, more simplified indications and protocols to minimize discomfort should be sought. For the time being, HBPM could be a reasonable alternative. Wiley 2020-03 Article PeerReviewed Shin, Jinho and Kario, Kazuomi and Chia, Yook-Chin and Turana, Yuda and Chen, Chen-Huan and Buranakitjaroen, Peera and Divinagracia, Romeo and Nailes, Jennifer and Hoshide, Satoshi and Siddique, Saulat and Sison, Jorge and Soenarta, Arieska Ann and Sogunuru, Guru Prasad and Tay, Jam Chin and Teo, Boon Wee and Zhang, Yu-Qing and Park, Sungha and Minh, Huynh Van and Kabutoya, Tomoyuki and Verma, Narsingh and Wang, Tzung-Dau and Wang, Ji-Guang (2020) Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network. Journal of Clinical Hypertension, 22 (3). pp. 384-390. ISSN 1524-6175, DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.13724 <https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.13724>. 10.1111/jch.13724
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine (General)
spellingShingle R Medicine (General)
Shin, Jinho
Kario, Kazuomi
Chia, Yook-Chin
Turana, Yuda
Chen, Chen-Huan
Buranakitjaroen, Peera
Divinagracia, Romeo
Nailes, Jennifer
Hoshide, Satoshi
Siddique, Saulat
Sison, Jorge
Soenarta, Arieska Ann
Sogunuru, Guru Prasad
Tay, Jam Chin
Teo, Boon Wee
Zhang, Yu-Qing
Park, Sungha
Minh, Huynh Van
Kabutoya, Tomoyuki
Verma, Narsingh
Wang, Tzung-Dau
Wang, Ji-Guang
Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network
description Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) can measure 24-hour blood pressure (BP), including nocturnal BP and diurnal variations. This feature of ABPM could be of value in Asian populations for preventing cardiovascular events. However, no study has yet investigated regarding the use of ABPM in actual clinical settings in Asian countries/regions. In this study, 11 experts from 11 countries/regions were asked to answer questionnaires regarding the use of ABPM. We found that its use was very limited in primary care settings and almost exclusively available in referral settings. The indications of ABPM in actual clinical settings were largely similar to those of home BP monitoring (HBPM), that is, diagnosis of white-coat or masked hypertension and more accurate BP measurement for borderline clinic BP. Other interesting indications, such as nighttime BP patterns, including non-dipper BP, morning BP surge, and BP variability, were hardly adopted in daily clinical practice. The use of ABPM as treatment guidance for detecting treated but uncontrolled hypertension in the Asian countries/regions didn't seem to be common. The barrier to the use of ABPM was primarily its availability; in referral centers, patient reluctance owing to discomfort or sleep disturbance was the most frequent barrier. ABPM use was significantly more economical when it was reimbursed by public insurance. To facilitate ABPM use, more simplified indications and protocols to minimize discomfort should be sought. For the time being, HBPM could be a reasonable alternative.
format Article
author Shin, Jinho
Kario, Kazuomi
Chia, Yook-Chin
Turana, Yuda
Chen, Chen-Huan
Buranakitjaroen, Peera
Divinagracia, Romeo
Nailes, Jennifer
Hoshide, Satoshi
Siddique, Saulat
Sison, Jorge
Soenarta, Arieska Ann
Sogunuru, Guru Prasad
Tay, Jam Chin
Teo, Boon Wee
Zhang, Yu-Qing
Park, Sungha
Minh, Huynh Van
Kabutoya, Tomoyuki
Verma, Narsingh
Wang, Tzung-Dau
Wang, Ji-Guang
author_facet Shin, Jinho
Kario, Kazuomi
Chia, Yook-Chin
Turana, Yuda
Chen, Chen-Huan
Buranakitjaroen, Peera
Divinagracia, Romeo
Nailes, Jennifer
Hoshide, Satoshi
Siddique, Saulat
Sison, Jorge
Soenarta, Arieska Ann
Sogunuru, Guru Prasad
Tay, Jam Chin
Teo, Boon Wee
Zhang, Yu-Qing
Park, Sungha
Minh, Huynh Van
Kabutoya, Tomoyuki
Verma, Narsingh
Wang, Tzung-Dau
Wang, Ji-Guang
author_sort Shin, Jinho
title Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network
title_short Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network
title_full Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network
title_fullStr Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network
title_full_unstemmed Current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Asian countries: A report from the HOPE Asia Network
title_sort current status of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in asian countries: a report from the hope asia network
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/37240/
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score 13.2014675