Performance of Eleven Simplified Methods for the Identification of Elevated Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents

The identification of elevated blood pressure (BP) in children and adolescents relies on complex percentile tables. The present study compares the performance of 11 simplified methods for assessing elevated or high BP in children and adolescents using individual-level data from 7 countries. Data on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. 1979) Tex. 1979), 2016-09, Vol.68 (3), p.614-620
Hauptverfasser: Ma, Chuanwei, Kelishadi, Roya, Hong, Young Mi, Bovet, Pascal, Khadilkar, Anuradha, Nawarycz, Tadeusz, Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Małgorzata, Aounallah-Skhiri, Hajer, Zong, Xin’nan, Motlagh, Mohammad Esmaeil, Kim, Hae Soon, Khadilkar, Vaman, Krzyżaniak, Alicja, Ben Romdhane, Habiba, Heshmat, Ramin, Chiplonkar, Shashi, Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Barbara, El Ati, Jalila, Qorbani, Mostafa, Kajale, Neha, Traissac, Pierre, Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Lidia, Ardalan, Gelayol, Parthasarathy, Lavanya, Zhao, Min, Xi, Bo
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container_end_page 620
container_issue 3
container_start_page 614
container_title Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. 1979)
container_volume 68
creator Ma, Chuanwei
Kelishadi, Roya
Hong, Young Mi
Bovet, Pascal
Khadilkar, Anuradha
Nawarycz, Tadeusz
Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Małgorzata
Aounallah-Skhiri, Hajer
Zong, Xin’nan
Motlagh, Mohammad Esmaeil
Kim, Hae Soon
Khadilkar, Vaman
Krzyżaniak, Alicja
Ben Romdhane, Habiba
Heshmat, Ramin
Chiplonkar, Shashi
Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Barbara
El Ati, Jalila
Qorbani, Mostafa
Kajale, Neha
Traissac, Pierre
Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Lidia
Ardalan, Gelayol
Parthasarathy, Lavanya
Zhao, Min
Xi, Bo
description The identification of elevated blood pressure (BP) in children and adolescents relies on complex percentile tables. The present study compares the performance of 11 simplified methods for assessing elevated or high BP in children and adolescents using individual-level data from 7 countries. Data on BP were available for a total of 58 899 children and adolescents aged 6 to 17 years from 7 national surveys in China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States. Performance of the simplified methods for screening elevated or high BP was assessed with receiver operating characteristic curve (area under the curve), sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value. When pooling individual data from the 7 countries, all 11 simplified methods performed well in screening high BP, with high area under the curve values (0.84–0.98), high sensitivity (0.69–1.00), high specificity (0.87–1.00), and high negative predictive values (≥0.98). However, positive predictive value was low for most simplified methods, but reached ≈0.90 for each of the 3 methods, including sex- and age-specific BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), the formula for BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), and the simplified method relying on a child’s absolute height. These findings were found independently of sex, age, and geographical location. Similar results were found for simplified methods for screening elevated BP. In conclusion, all 11 simplified methods performed well for identifying high or elevated BP in children and adolescents, but 3 methods performed best and may be most useful for screening purposes.
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The present study compares the performance of 11 simplified methods for assessing elevated or high BP in children and adolescents using individual-level data from 7 countries. Data on BP were available for a total of 58 899 children and adolescents aged 6 to 17 years from 7 national surveys in China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States. Performance of the simplified methods for screening elevated or high BP was assessed with receiver operating characteristic curve (area under the curve), sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value. When pooling individual data from the 7 countries, all 11 simplified methods performed well in screening high BP, with high area under the curve values (0.84–0.98), high sensitivity (0.69–1.00), high specificity (0.87–1.00), and high negative predictive values (≥0.98). However, positive predictive value was low for most simplified methods, but reached ≈0.90 for each of the 3 methods, including sex- and age-specific BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), the formula for BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), and the simplified method relying on a child’s absolute height. These findings were found independently of sex, age, and geographical location. Similar results were found for simplified methods for screening elevated BP. 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However, positive predictive value was low for most simplified methods, but reached ≈0.90 for each of the 3 methods, including sex- and age-specific BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), the formula for BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), and the simplified method relying on a child’s absolute height. These findings were found independently of sex, age, and geographical location. Similar results were found for simplified methods for screening elevated BP. 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The present study compares the performance of 11 simplified methods for assessing elevated or high BP in children and adolescents using individual-level data from 7 countries. Data on BP were available for a total of 58 899 children and adolescents aged 6 to 17 years from 7 national surveys in China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States. Performance of the simplified methods for screening elevated or high BP was assessed with receiver operating characteristic curve (area under the curve), sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value. When pooling individual data from the 7 countries, all 11 simplified methods performed well in screening high BP, with high area under the curve values (0.84–0.98), high sensitivity (0.69–1.00), high specificity (0.87–1.00), and high negative predictive values (≥0.98). However, positive predictive value was low for most simplified methods, but reached ≈0.90 for each of the 3 methods, including sex- and age-specific BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), the formula for BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), and the simplified method relying on a child’s absolute height. These findings were found independently of sex, age, and geographical location. Similar results were found for simplified methods for screening elevated BP. In conclusion, all 11 simplified methods performed well for identifying high or elevated BP in children and adolescents, but 3 methods performed best and may be most useful for screening purposes.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>American Heart Association, Inc</pub><pmid>27432869</pmid><doi>10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.116.07659</doi><tpages>7</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; American Heart Association Journals; Journals@Ovid Complete; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Adolescent
Age Factors
Blood Pressure Determination - methods
Child
Child Health
Cross-Sectional Studies
Databases, Factual
Female
Humans
Hypertension - diagnosis
Hypertension - epidemiology
Male
Mass Screening - methods
Monitoring, Physiologic - methods
Risk Assessment
Task Performance and Analysis
title Performance of Eleven Simplified Methods for the Identification of Elevated Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents
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