How to Cope With Unreliable Office Blood Pressure Measurement?
AJH
EDITORIAL
2005; 18:1519 –1521
BP Measurement
How to Cope With Unreliable
Office Blood Pressure Measurement?
George S. Stergiou
he diagnosis of hypertension is traditionally based
on conventional measurement of blood pressure
(BP) in the office taken using a standard mercury
sphygmomanometer and the auscultatory technique.1,2
Unfortunately, despite wide application of the technique
for longer than a century, important problems still exist
regarding the reliability of the diagnosis of hypertension
that is based on conventional office BP measurements.1,2
This deficiency of office BP measurement is due to inherent limitations of the method but also because of its poor
standardization and application.1,2
In this issue of the American Journal of Hypertension
Campbell et al3 assessed the reliability of the classification
of hypertension based on usual office BP measurements
obtained in family practice, in comparison with carefully
standardized office measurements and ambulatory BP
monitoring. The study showed usual office BP to be significantly higher than standardized office BP or daytime
ambulatory BP. The authors concluded that usual office
BP measurement often leads to significant overestimation
of BP and thereby overdiagnosis of hypertension.3
The findings of this study have probably been exaggerated due to an indication bias, given that only subjects
referred for ambulatory BP monitoring were included.3
Because the major indication for ambulatory BP monitoring is suspected white coat phenomenon, it seems that
study participants were those subjects whose physicians
believed office BP was unrepresentative (eg, elevated office but low home BP). An “order” effect may also be
present in this study, because participants were not
randomized to the order of usual, standardized and ambulatory BP measurement. Nevertheless, this study is important because it brings into discussion the critical and
unresolved issue of the poor methodology used for office
BP measurement. Such data raise the question as to
whether, after a century of use, the failure of the medical
profession to master the Riva-Rocci/Korotkoff technique
can be overcome.
Measurement of BP aims to estimate the average level
of an unstable variable, in order to make decisions about
T
life-saving but at the same time potentially harmful lifetime drug treatment. It is striking how little attention is
often given to the assessment of the “true” BP level and
the decision to prescribe long-term antihypertensive drug
treatment. The issue of the unreliable BP measurement by
physicians was highlighted in a caustic manner in a review
by Thomas Pickering4 in 1994, when he stated that “the
measurement of blood pressure is much too serious to be
left to physicians.” It seems that practicing physicians of
nowadays are being weighed down with information overflow, technological advances, and many other commitments. It might therefore be argued that the average
physician is unwilling to spend the time needed to perform
thoroughly a simple conventional procedure, which is
being widely used by medical assistants and even patients.
An additional factor contributing to unreliable office BP
measurement is the infrastructure of care delivery that,
even in well-developed healthcare systems, allows insufficient time to be devoted to an office visit that has to
include history taking, review of laboratory tests, physical
examination and BP measurement, advice and instructions, and treatment prescription.
Further to the limitations of the usual office BP measurement attributed to poor methodology and human error,
important problems still exist. It is recognized that, even
using carefully standardized office measurements, in more
than 30% of subjects attending a hypertension clinic the
white coat and the masked phenomena may lead to
significant overestimation or underestimation of BP and
thereby overtreatment or undertreatment.1,2 In 1991,
James Conway clearly suggested that, in fact, the major
drawbacks of office BP measurement cannot be overcome
by saying: “Clinic blood pressure is poorly reproducible
and unable to diagnose hypertension. It is in error approximately 50% of the time. Therefore, the clinic blood pressure is not worth taking and another kind of measurement
has to be found.”5 In line with this view, Campbell et al3
suggested that the development of alternative methods for
assessing BP should be considered.
Alternative methods for hypertension diagnosis to be
Received July 22, 2005. First decision July 23, 2005. Accepted July 26,
2005.
From the Hypertension Center, Third University Department of Medicine, Sotiria Hospital, Athens, Greece.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. George S. Stergiou, Hypertension Center, Third University Department of Medicine,
Sotiria Hospital, 152 Mesogion Avenue, Athens 11527, Greece; e-mail:
© 2005 by the American Journal of Hypertension, Ltd.
Published
by Elsevier Inc.
0895-7061/05/$30.00
doi:10.1016/j.amjhyper.2005.07.014
1520
OFFICE BLOOD PRESSURE MEASUREMENT
considered include either out-of-office BP measurement or
alternative protocols for office BP measurements. Out-ofoffice BP measurement, either by the patients at home or
by using ambulatory monitoring, is advantageous because
it provides multiple BP measurements in the usual environment of each individual. There is considerable evidence suggesting that, compared to office BP, both home
and ambulatory measurements are more reproducible,6
eliminate the white coat effect,7 and are more closely
related to target organ damage and cardiovascular risk.1,2
Therefore, these methods have been endorsed by recent
hypertension guidelines as supplementary sources of information to the practicing physician.1,2
Alternative protocols for office BP measurements might
also be considered. Campbell et al3 showed that the conventional methodology is improved when carefully standardized measurements are taken by trained research
nurses. The lower BPs obtained by the trained nurse
should be attributed to the careful standardization of the
method rather that the fact that measurements were taken
by a nurse, because in family practices terminal digit
preference and hypertension overdiagnosis were equally
prevalent with physician- or nurse-taken office BPs.3 Myers et al8 showed higher prevalence of the white coat effect
with routine office measurements compared to special
study BPs taken by the same physicians, whereas BPs
taken by research nurses induced the least white coat
effect. More importantly, routine office measurements in
that study provided the only BP measurements not correlated with left ventricular mass.8
Two important questions regarding alternative office
measurement methods should be addressed. The first is
how feasible the wide application of a novel methodology
is in family practice and the maintenance of its performance at a high standard. This is clearly dependent on the
acceptance of the new method by physicians (...truncated)