Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Accuracy of Cuffless Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitors Compared to Cuff-based Monitors in an Ambulatory Elderly Population: A Pilot Study
Hypertension is extremely common amongst the elderly, typically manifesting as a silent disease with potentially devastating consequences if left undetected and untreated. Such consequences include stroke, myocardial infarction, kidney and eye disease. Opportunistic screening for hypertension is therefore standard in clinical practice. Currently, the standard of care for screening in the western world is with 24-hour ambulatory cuff-based devices which are often intolerable, particularly for elderly patients. Several novel cuffless wearables have been developed to overcome the limitations of cuff-based monitors. These devices offer significant advantages over cuff-based devices, including improved patient tolerance and user acceptability. Numerous cuffless monitors are now commercially available. However, validation of such devices is challenging as there is no current universal standard for validating such devices.5 This is highlighted by the heterogenous and often inadequate study methods used to demonstrate accuracy of commercially available cuffless devices for blood pressure measurements. Indeed, the uncertainty about their merit is reflected in international guidelines. The 2023 European Society of Hypertension guidelines currently do not recommend routine use of such devices in clinical practice for evaluation of blood pressure. There are limited clinical trials comparing 24-hour cuff-based devices directly to cuffless devices, and even fewer specifically in an elderly population where they may be particularly advantageous due to design features that improve tolerability. This study thus aims to address this important gap in the literature to better understand if cuffless devices provide reliable blood pressure measurements in the elderly population by directly comparing these devices to the current standard of care in blood pressure evaluation. The Aktiia device will be used as a surrogate for cuffless wearables while a standard 24-hour ambulatory cuff-based device will represent cuff-based devices. The Aktiia device is a cuffless solution worn as a bracelet on the wrist. It contains optical sensors which collect photoplethysmography signals from arteries in the patient's wrist and uses these to estimate blood pressure. This device is commercially available and clinically validated for use in patients up to age 85.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 30 |
Est. completion date | September 30, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | August 30, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 65 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Adults >65 years old - Enrolled on Sligo/Leitrim ICPOP programme - Participants (or carers) must have access to a smart phone compatible with the Aktiia app Exclusion Criteria: - Cognitive impairment or diagnosis of dementia - Adults unable to provide informed consent - Life-expectancy less than one year - Patient's unlikely to comply with trial protocol in opinion of investigator's |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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Sligo General Hospital |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Proportion of recruited patients who provide at least 5 daytime cuffless blood pressure readings per day | Pilot Outcome | 4 months | |
Other | Proportion of total measurements taken which can be paired (i.e. taken within 1-hour of a measurement from the other device) | Pilot Outcome | 4 months | |
Other | Proportion of missing data from activity diaries | Pilot Outcome | 4 months | |
Other | Proportion of recruited patients who provide at least 3 paired blood pressure readings for 3 consecutive days | Pilot Outcome | 4 months | |
Primary | Mean paired difference between cuffless daytime blood pressure measurements (systolic and diastolic) and cuff-based measurements | 4 months | ||
Secondary | Mean paired difference between cuffless daytime blood pressure measurements (systolic and diastolic) and cuff-based measurements taken in a resting state | 4 months | ||
Secondary | Mean difference between mean 24-hour cuffless daytime blood pressure measurements (systolic and diastolic) and cuff-based measurements on a per patient basis | 4 months | ||
Secondary | Tolerability : Mean paired differences on Comfort Rating Scale (CRS) between devices | This is a well-validated, quick and easy-to-use tool to compare comfort of wearable devices.7 It consists of 6 domains of comfort, with a 21-point scale used to score each. A score of 0 indicates a high-level of comfort for a particular domain description, and vice versa for a score of 20. The mean and standard deviation will be reported for all domains, and compared across the two devices. | 4 months | |
Secondary | User Acceptability: Mean paired differences on System Usability Scale (SUS) between devices | This is a widely used, quick and well-validated questionnaire for the assessment of perceived usability. It consists of 10 items represented as statements relating to an aspect of usability. Each item is scored from 0-5 on a Likert scale, where '0' correlates to strong disagreement and '5' correlates to strong agreement. Overall transformed score ranges from 0 - 100, with higher scores indicating better user acceptability. | 4 months |
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