Abstract

BackgroundReliable home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) is essential to effective hypertension management; however, manual recording is subject to underreporting and inaccuracies. Mobile health technologies hold great potential as HBPM tools, but the fidelity of a smartphone app in HBPM has not been adequately assessed.ObjectiveThe primary aim of the trial was to compare the fidelity of a smartphone app to that of a handwritten logbook in making HBPM data available to clinicians at follow-up visits. Fidelity was defined as the percentage of scheduled blood pressure (BP) recordings over a 3-week period that were properly recorded and reported to the clinic. The secondary aims were to investigate patient factors associated with HBPM fidelity and to explore the effect of time on the fidelity.MethodsA 2-arm, parallel, unblinded, randomized controlled pilot trial was conducted in a government polyclinic in Singapore. Hypertensive adults, aged 40 to 70 years, who were on antihypertensive medication and owned a smartphone were recruited and randomized by a computer-generated randomization schedule to 3 weeks of either semiautomated HBPM utilizing a Bluetooth-enabled BP monitor and a smartphone app or a fully manual process utilizing a conventional handwritten logbook. The primary outcome was home BP recording fidelity.ResultsOf the 80 patients randomized, 79 (smartphone app: 38 and logbook: 41) were included in the final analysis. Although fidelity was higher among the app users, it did not differ significantly between study arms (smartphone app: 66.7% and logbook: 52.4%; P=.21). Chinese and Indian ethnicities were associated with higher fidelity (absolute percent and 95% CI) by 35.6% (4.27 to 66.9) and 45.0% (8.69 to 81.3), respectively, in comparison with other ethnicities (P=.03); longer smartphone ownership increased fidelity on an average of 10.5% (0.83 to 20.2) per year (P=.03); the number of apps on the smartphone decreased fidelity at a rate of −0.32% (−0.58 to −0.05) per app (P=.02); years of hypertension morbidity increased fidelity at a rate of 1.56% (0.03 to 3.09) per year (P=.046); and the number of people working in the household decreased fidelity at a rate of −8.18% (−16.3 to −0.08) per additional working person (P=.048). The fidelity of the app was significantly higher in the first week (64.4%) than the second (55.1%, P=.001) and third (58.2%, P=.03) weeks of monitoring.ConclusionsAmid the increasing integration of health technologies into clinical practice, our study demonstrates the feasibility of smartphone app–assisted HBPM in hypertensive adults of Singapore. Our pilot study found no statistically significant difference in mean BP recording fidelity between a smartphone app and conventional handwritten logbook. However, the small sample size precludes definitive conclusions and highlights the need for a larger, adequately powered trial.Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT03209024; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03209024 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/78EVWBg0T)

Highlights

  • BackgroundHypertension is the leading attributable risk factor for cardiovascular disease and death, globally [1]

  • Amid the increasing integration of health technologies into clinical practice, our study demonstrates the feasibility of smartphone app–assisted home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) in hypertensive adults of Singapore

  • Our pilot study found no statistically significant difference in mean blood pressure (BP) recording fidelity between a smartphone app and conventional handwritten logbook

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundHypertension is the leading attributable risk factor for cardiovascular disease and death, globally [1]. The prognostic value of HBPM improves with the number of home BP measurements that patients are able to provide to their health care providers [3], emphasizing the importance of having a reliable means of collecting and reporting home BP data at each office visit. The lack of reliability in the conventional HBPM method could be an important contributing factor in the failure to achieve effective BP control and cardiovascular risk reduction in these patients. The purpose of HBPM is undermined and the value of reported measurements is diminished without an effective means of making accurate home BP readings available to clinicians. It is these considerations that motivate and necessitate the exploration of more reliable methods of communicating home BP values to health care providers. Mobile health technologies hold great potential as HBPM tools, but the fidelity of a smartphone app in HBPM has not been adequately assessed

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