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. 2019 Jun 25;21(8):64.
doi: 10.1007/s11906-019-0967-2.

Home Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children and Adolescents: Systematic Review of Evidence on Clinical Utility

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Home Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children and Adolescents: Systematic Review of Evidence on Clinical Utility

George Stergiou et al. Curr Hypertens Rep. .

Abstract

Purpose of review: For the accurate diagnosis and management of hypertension, out-of-office blood pressure evaluation using ambulatory (ABPM) or home monitoring (HBPM) is currently recommended. In children, there is considerable evidence on the clinical utility of ABPM, whereas the evidence on HBPM is limited. This systematic review presents (i) the benefits of HBPM in children; (ii) the evidence on normal range, diagnostic accuracy, and relationship with preclinical organ damage; and (iii) guidance for devices, monitoring schedule, and interpretation.

Recent findings: HBPM is a useful adjunct to the conventional office measurements for the evaluation of children with suspected or treated hypertension. HBPM is feasible in children and has good reproducibility, diagnostic accuracy and acceptability by users, and relatively low cost. Thus, it has greater potential for widespread and long-term use than ABPM, which is more expensive and often not available or not tolerated. Automated monitors that have been clinically validated specifically in children should be used with appropriate cuff size. HBPM for 7 days (minimum 3) with duplicate morning and evening measurements (minimum 12 readings) should be performed in children with suspected or treated hypertension before each office visit. Until more data become available, in case of diagnostic disagreement between office blood pressure and HBPM, treatment decisions should be based on ABPM. HBPM is clinically useful in children with hypertension. More research is needed on its clinical application, and more automated devices need to be clinically validated in this population.

Keywords: Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; Diagnosis; Masked hypertension; Out of office; Self-measurement; White coat hypertension.

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