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Blood pressure control and treatment adherence in hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome: protocol of a randomized controlled study based on home blood pressure telemonitoring vs. conventional management and assessment of psychological determinants of adherence (TELEBPMET Study)

Authors :
Parati Gianfranco
Omboni Stefano
Compare Angelo
Grossi Enzo
Callus Edward
Venco Achille
Destro Maurizio
Villa Giuseppe
Palatini Paolo
Rosei Enrico Agabiti
Scalvini Simonetta
Taddei Stefano
Manfellotto Dario
Favale Stefano
De Matteis Carmine
Guglielmi Michele
Source :
Trials, Vol 14, Iss 1, p 22 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
BMC, 2013.

Abstract

Abstract Background Inadequate blood pressure control and poor adherence to treatment remain among the major limitations in the management of hypertensive patients, particularly of those at high risk of cardiovascular events. Preliminary evidence suggests that home blood pressure telemonitoring (HBPT) might help increasing the chance of achieving blood pressure targets and improve patient’s therapeutic adherence. However, all these potential advantages of HBPT have not yet been fully investigated. Methods/design The purpose of this open label, parallel group, randomized, controlled study is to assess whether, in patients with high cardiovascular risk (treated or untreated essential arterial hypertension - both in the office and in ambulatory conditions over 24 h - and metabolic syndrome), long-term (48 weeks) blood pressure control is more effective when based on HBPT and on the feedback to patients by their doctor between visits, or when based exclusively on blood pressure determination during quarterly office visits (conventional management (CM)). A total of 252 patients will be enrolled and randomized to usual care (n=84) or HBPT (n=168). The primary study endpoint will be the rate of subjects achieving normal daytime ambulatory blood pressure targets ( Discussion The TELEBPMET Study will show whether HBPT is effective in improving blood pressure control and related medical and economic outcomes in hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome. It will also provide a comprehensive understanding of the psychological determinants of medication adherence and blood pressure control of these patients. Trial registration Clinical Trials.gov: NCT01541566

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17456215
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Trials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6ed7ea42c1b4cd79f571d22a85f7c19
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-14-22