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Artemios Karagiannidis, Marieta Theodorakopoulou, Maria Eleni Alexandrou, Danai Faitatzidou, Afroditi Baksiova, Panagiotis Giamalis, Aikaterini Papagianni, Pantelis Sarafidis, MO090: Diagnostic Performance of Pre-Dialysis And Ambulatory Blood Pressure Levels in Men and Women Hemodialysis Patients, Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, Volume 37, Issue Supplement_3, May 2022, gfac133.011, https://doi.org/10.1093/ndt/gfac133.011
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Abstract
Ambulatory blood pressure (BP) control is worse in men than in women with chronic kidney disease or kidney transplantation. So far no study assessed in parallel possible effects of sex differences on the prevalence, control and BP phenotypes according to pre-dialysis and 48-h ABPM in hemodialysis patients. Further, no study has evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of pre-dialysis BP levels in men and women hemodialysis patients.
129 male and 91 female hemodialysis patients that underwent 48-h ABPM with Mobil-O-Graph-NG were included in this analysis. Hypertension was defined as follows: (1) pre-dialysis BP ≥ 140/90 mmHg or use of antihypertensive agents, (2) 48-h BP ≥ 130/80 mmHg or use of antihypertensive agents.
The prevalence of hypertension was not different between men and women with the use of pre-dialysis BP (92.2% versus 92.3%, P = 0.987, respectively) or 48-h ABPM (92.2% versus 89%, P = 0.411). With the use of pre-dialysis BP men had significantly lower control rates than women (18.5% versus 32.1%, P = 0.025); a similar pattern of worse control in men was apparent with the use of ABPM, but the difference was not statistically significant (22.7% versus 28.4%, P = 0.360). The rate of patients with concordant lack of control by pre-dialysis and ABPM readings was significantly higher in men than women (65.3% versus 49.4%, P = 0.023); white-coat (14.9% versus 17.6%, P = 0.593) and masked hypertension (10.7% versus 18.8%, P = 0.101) did not differ between groups. However, the misclassifation rate with the use of pre-dialysis BP was lower in men than women. There was moderate or at best fair agreement between pre-dialysis and ambulatory BP with regards to the prevalence (men: κ-statistics = 0.39, P < 0.001 and women: 0.27, P = 0.011) and control rates (κ-statistics = 0.25, P = 0.005 and 0.17, P = 0.124, respectively). Pre-dialysis BP ≥ 140/90 mmHg had sensitivity/specificity of 85.9%/51.4% in men and 72.4%/54.5% in women for the diagnosis of 48-h BP ≥ 130/80 mmHg. Receiver-operating-curve analyses confirmed this poor diagnostic performance.
The prevalence of hypertension is similar between men and women hemodialysis patients, but men have worse rates of office BP control. The diagnostic accuracy of pre-dialysis BP levels was equally poor in men and women hemodialysis patients.
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