Height-specific blood pressure cutoffs for screening elevated and high blood pressure in children and adolescents: an International Study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_FE61AE818443
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Height-specific blood pressure cutoffs for screening elevated and high blood pressure in children and adolescents: an International Study.
Journal
Hypertension research
Author(s)
Hou Y., Bovet P., Kelishadi R., Litwin M., Khadilkar A., Hong Y.M., Nawarycz T., Stawińska-Witoszyńska B., Aounallah-Skhiri H., Motlagh M.E., Kim H.S., Khadilkar V., Krzyżaniak A., Ben Romdhane H., Heshmat R., Chiplonkar S., Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska M., Ati J.E., Qorbani M., Kajale N., Traissac P., Ostrowska-Nawarycz L., Ardalan G., Parthasarathy L., Yang L., Zhao M., Chiolero A., Xi B.
ISSN
1348-4214 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0916-9636
Publication state
Published
Issued date
06/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
42
Number
6
Pages
845-851
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Pediatric blood pressure (BP) reference tables are generally based on sex, age, and height and tend to be cumbersome to use in routine clinical practice. In this study, we aimed to develop a new, height-specific simple BP table according to the international child BP reference table based on sex, age and height and to evaluate its performance using international data. We validated the simple table in a derivation cohort that included 58,899 children and adolescents aged 6-17 years from surveys in 7 countries (China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States) and in a validation cohort that included 70,072 participants from three other surveys (China, Poland and Seychelles). The BP cutoff values for the simple table were calculated for eight height categories for both the 90th ("elevated BP") and 95th ("high BP") percentiles of BP. The simple table had a high performance to predict high BP compared to the reference table, with high values (boys/girls) of area under the curve (0.94/0.91), sensitivity (88.5%/82.9%), specificity (99.3%/99.7%), positive predictive values (93.9%/97.3%), and negative predictive values (98.5%/97.8%) in the pooled data from 10 studies. The simple table performed similarly well for predicting elevated BP. A simple table based on height only predicts elevated BP and high BP in children and adolescents nearly as well as the international table based on sex, age, and height. This has important implications for simplifying the detection of pediatric high BP in clinical practice.
Keywords
adolescents, children, elevated blood pressure, epidemiology, high blood pressure, methodology
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
04/01/2019 11:58
Last modification date
20/08/2019 17:29
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