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Blood Pressure Classification Status in Children With CKD Following Adoption of the 2017 American Academy of Pediatrics Guideline

Authors :
Derek K. Ng
Megan K. Carroll
Susan L. Furth
Bradley A. Warady
Joseph T. Flynn
Sahar Fathallah-Shaykh
Anjali Nayak
Martin Turman
Tom Blydt-Hansen
Cynthia Wong
Steve Alexander
Ora Yadin
Elizabeth Ingulli
Robert Mak
Cheryl Sanchez-Kazi
Asha Moudgil
Caroline Gluck
Carolyn Abitbol
Marissa DeFrietas
Chryso Katsoufis
Wacharee Seeherunvong
Larry Greenbaum
Lyndsay Harshman
Craig Langman
H. Ann & Robert
Sonia Krishnan
Amy Wilson
Stefan Kiessling
Margaret Murphy
Siddharth Shah
Janice Sullivan
Sushil Gupta
Samir El-Dahr
Stacy Drury
Nancy Rodig
Allison Dart
Meredith Atkinson
Arlene Gerson
Tej Matoo
Zubin Modi
Alejandro Quiroga
Bradley Warady
Rebecca Johnson
Vikas Dharnidharka
Stephen Hooper
Susan Massengill
Liliana Gomez-Mendez
Matthew Hand
Joann Carlson
Hanan Tawadrous
Roberto Jodorkovsky
Craig Wong
Frederick Kaskel
Shlomo Shinnar
Jeffrey Saland
Marc Lande
George Schwartz
Anil Mongia
Donna Claes
Mark Mitsnefes
Katherine Dell
Hiren Patel
Pascale Lane
Rulan Parekh
Amira Al-Uzri
Kelsey Richardson
Susan Furth
Larry Copelovitch
Elaine Ku
Joshua Samuels
Poyyapakkam Srivaths
Samhar Al-Akash
Patricia Seo-Mayer
Victoria Norwood
Joseph Flynn
Cynthia Pan
Sharon Bartosh
Source :
American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Accurate detection of hypertension is crucial for clinical management of pediatric chronic kidney disease (CKD). The 2017 American Academy of Pediatrics childhood hypertension guidelines included new normative blood pressure (BP) values and revised definitions of BP categories. In this study, we examined the effect of applying these changes to the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children (CKiD) cohort compared to use of the 2004 Fourth Report normative data and definitions.Observational cohort study.Children and adolescents in the CKiD cohort.Clinic blood pressure measurements.Blood pressure percentiles and hypertension stages calculated using the 2017 and 2004 guidelines.Agreement analysis compared the estimated percentile and prevalence of high blood pressure based on the 2017 and 2004 guidelines to clinic and combined ambulatory blood pressure readings.The proportion of children classified as having normal clinic blood pressure was similar using the 2017 and 2004 guidelines, but the use of the 2017 normative data classified more participants as having hypertensive-range blood pressure (22% vs. 11%) with marginal reproducibility (kappa= 0.569, 95%CI: 0.538, 0.599). Those identified as hypertensive by the 2017 guidelines had higher levels of proteinuria compared to those identified using the 2004 guidelines. There were substantially more participants with white coat and ambulatory hypertension when using the 2017 guidelines (3.5% vs. 1.5%; and 15.5% vs. 7.9%, respectively). The proportion with masked hypertension was lower using the 2017 guidelines (40.2% vs. 47.8%, respectively) with good reproducibility (kappa= 0.799, 95%CI: 0.778, 0.819), and the percentage of participants with normal ambulatory blood pressure was similar (40.9% vs. 42.9%, respectively), LIMITATIONS: Relationship with long-term progression and target organ damage was not assessed.A greater percentage of children with CKD were identified as hypertensive based on both clinic and ambulatory blood pressure when using the 2017 vs. the 2004 guidelines, and the 2017 guidelines better discriminated those with higher levels of proteinuria. The substantial differences in the classification of hypertension when using the 2004 vs. 2017 guidelines should inform clinical care.

Subjects

Subjects :
Nephrology

Details

ISSN :
15236838
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....95eb690ab49ebe457f19201ecb3d4720