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Predicting Out-of-Office Blood Pressure in the Clinic for the Diagnosis of Hypertension in Primary Care: An Economic Evaluation

Monahan, Mark; Jowett, Sue; Lovibond, Kate; Gill, Paramjit; Godwin, Marshall; Greenfield, Sheila; Hanley, Janet; Hobbs, F.D. Richard; Martin, Una; Mant, Jonathan; McKinstry, Brian; Williams, Bryan; Sheppard, James P.; McManus, Richard J.

Authors

Mark Monahan

Sue Jowett

Kate Lovibond

Paramjit Gill

Marshall Godwin

Sheila Greenfield

F.D. Richard Hobbs

Una Martin

Jonathan Mant

Brian McKinstry

Bryan Williams

James P. Sheppard

Richard J. McManus



Abstract

Clinical guidelines in the United States and United Kingdom recommend that individuals with suspected hypertension should have ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring to confirm the diagnosis. This approach reduces misdiagnosis because of white coat hypertension but will not identify people with masked hypertension who may benefit from treatment. The Predicting Out-of-Office Blood Pressure (PROOF-BP) algorithm predicts masked and white coat hypertension based on patient characteristics and clinic BP, improving the accuracy of diagnosis while limiting subsequent ambulatory BP monitoring. This study assessed the cost-effectiveness of using this tool in diagnosing hypertension in primary care. A Markov cost–utility cohort model was developed to compare diagnostic strategies: the PROOF-BP approach, including those with clinic BP ≥130/80 mm Hg who receive ambulatory BP monitoring as guided by the algorithm, compared with current standard diagnostic strategies including those with clinic BP ≥140/90 mm Hg combined with further monitoring (ambulatory BP monitoring as reference, clinic, and home monitoring also assessed). The model adopted a lifetime horizon with a 3-month time cycle, taking a UK Health Service/Personal Social Services perspective. The PROOF-BP algorithm was cost-effective in screening all patients with clinic BP ≥130/80 mm Hg compared with current strategies that only screen those with clinic BP ≥140/90 mm Hg, provided healthcare providers were willing to pay up to £20 000 ($26 000)/quality-adjusted life year gained. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses supported the base-case findings. The PROOF-BP algorithm seems to be cost-effective compared with the conventional BP diagnostic options in primary care. Its use in clinical practice is likely to lead to reduced cardiovascular disease, death, and disability.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 12, 2017
Online Publication Date Dec 4, 2017
Publication Date Dec 4, 2017
Deposit Date Jan 9, 2018
Publicly Available Date Jun 5, 2018
Journal Hypertension
Print ISSN 0194-911X
Electronic ISSN 1524-4563
Publisher American Heart Association
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1161/hypertensionaha.117.10244
Keywords algorithm, blood pressure, diagnosis, general practice, hypertension
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/1024411
Contract Date Jan 9, 2018

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Predicting Out-of-Office Blood Pressure (PROOF-BP) in the clinic for the diagnosis of hypertension in Primary Care: an economic evaluation (830 Kb)
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