• Lancet · Oct 2011

    Cost-effectiveness of options for the diagnosis of high blood pressure in primary care: a modelling study.

    • Kate Lovibond, Sue Jowett, Pelham Barton, Mark Caulfield, Carl Heneghan, F D Richard Hobbs, James Hodgkinson, Jonathan Mant, Una Martin, Bryan Williams, David Wonderling, and Richard J McManus.
    • National Clinical Guideline Centre, Royal College of Physicians, London, UK.
    • Lancet. 2011 Oct 1; 378 (9798): 1219-30.

    BackgroundThe diagnosis of hypertension has traditionally been based on blood-pressure measurements in the clinic, but home and ambulatory measurements better correlate with cardiovascular outcome, and ambulatory monitoring is more accurate than both clinic and home monitoring in diagnosing hypertension. We aimed to compare the cost-effectiveness of different diagnostic strategies for hypertension.MethodsWe did a Markov model-based probabilistic cost-effectiveness analysis. We used a hypothetical primary-care population aged 40 years or older with a screening blood-pressure measurement greater than 140/90 mm Hg and risk-factor prevalence equivalent to the general population. We compared three diagnostic strategies-further blood pressure measurement in the clinic, at home, and with an ambulatory monitor-in terms of lifetime costs, quality-adjusted life years, and cost-effectiveness.FindingsAmbulatory monitoring was the most cost-effective strategy for the diagnosis of hypertension for men and women of all ages. It was cost-saving for all groups (from -£56 [95% CI -105 to -10] in men aged 75 years to -£323 [-389 to -222] in women aged 40 years) and resulted in more quality-adjusted life years for men and women older than 50 years (from 0·006 [0·000 to 0·015] for women aged 60 years to 0·022 [0·012 to 0·035] for men aged 70 years). This finding was robust when assessed with a wide range of deterministic sensitivity analyses around the base case, but was sensitive if home monitoring was judged to have equal test performance to ambulatory monitoring or if treatment was judged effective irrespective of whether an individual was hypertensive.InterpretationAmbulatory monitoring as a diagnostic strategy for hypertension after an initial raised reading in the clinic would reduce misdiagnosis and save costs. Additional costs from ambulatory monitoring are counterbalanced by cost savings from better targeted treatment. Ambulatory monitoring is recommended for most patients before the start of antihypertensive drugs.FundingNational Institute for Health Research and the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence.Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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