Abstract
1 min readBlood pressure (BP) measures in women more sharply increase with age compared with men, with a widening disparity in older women. The use of home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) among women may improve this inequity. However, sex-related differences in adherence to HBPM are not well understood. We analyzed data from electronic Framingham Heart Study participants who were given a Withings digital BP cuff and instructed to perform HBPM weekly for 1 year. Adherence was defined as ≥1 BP measurement per week, averaged over 4-week segments. HTN status was self-reported. Group-based trajectory modeling (GBTM) was used to identify trajectory patterns of adherence. We investigated the association of 3 adherence patterns with HTN status stratified by sex using multinomial logistic models adjusting for age group, marital status, education, employment status, income, non-BP cardiac medication use, subjective health, depression and anxiety. Among 1,048 participants (59% female, mean age 53±9 years, 25% with HTN), we identified 3 trajectory groups corresponding to distinct patterns of HBPM adherence: early discontinuation (N = 458, 58% female, 21% HTN), gradual decrease (N = 360, 60% female, 27% HTN), and high adherence (N = 230, 57% female, 31% HTN, Figure 1 ). Women with HTN compared to women without HTN had 80% higher odds of being in the high adherence group versus early discontinuation group (aOR 1.80; 95% CI 1.02-3.17). This pattern was not observed for men (aOR 1.12; 95% CI 0.68-1.63). In this middle-aged eCohort, HTN was associated with high adherence to HBPM in women but not men. The targeted prescription of HBPM for woman should be studied to see if it can reduce sex disparities in BP control.
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