Anxiety, home blood pressure monitoring, and cardiovascular events among older hypertension patients during the COVID-19 pandemic

The global coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has led to a health crisis. It remains unclear how anxiety affects blood pressure (BP) and cardiovascular risk among older patients with hypertension. In this study, we extracted longitudinal data on home BP monitored via a smartphone-based app...

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Published inHypertension research Vol. 45; no. 5; pp. 856 - 865
Main Authors Zhang, Shuyuan, Zhong, Yixuan, Wang, Lixin, Yin, Xinhua, Li, Yufeng, Liu, Yunlan, Dai, Qiuyan, Tong, Anli, Li, Dongfeng, Zhang, Liangqing, Li, Ping, Zhang, Guohui, Huang, Rongjie, Liu, Jinguang, Zhao, Luosha, Yu, Jing, Zhang, Xinjun, Yang, Li, Cai, Jun, Zhang, Weili
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Nature Publishing Group 01.05.2022
Springer Nature Singapore
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Summary:The global coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has led to a health crisis. It remains unclear how anxiety affects blood pressure (BP) and cardiovascular risk among older patients with hypertension. In this study, we extracted longitudinal data on home BP monitored via a smartphone-based application in 3724 elderly patients with hypertension from a clinical trial (60–80 years; 240 in Wuhan and 3484 in non-Wuhan areas) to examine changes in morning BP during the COVID-19 outbreak in China. Anxiety was evaluated using Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 item scores. Changes in morning systolic BP (SBP) were analyzed for five 30-day periods during the pandemic (October 21, 2019 to March 21, 2020), including the pre-epidemic, incubation, developing, outbreak, and plateau periods. Data on cardiovascular events were prospectively collected for one year. A total of 262 individuals (7.0%) reported an increased level of anxiety, and 3462 individuals (93.0%) did not. Patients with anxiety showed higher morning SBP than patients without anxiety, and the between-group differences in SBP change were +1.2 mmHg and +1.7 mmHg during the outbreak and plateau periods ( P  < 0.05), respectively. The seasonal BP variation in winter among patients with anxiety was suppressed during the pandemic. Anxious patients had higher rates of uncontrolled BP. During the 1-year follow-up period, patients with anxiety had an increased risk of cardiovascular events with a hazard ratio of 2.47 (95% confidence interval, 1.10–5.58; P  = 0.03). In summary, COVID-19-related anxiety was associated with a short-term increase in morning SBP among older patients and led to a greater risk of cardiovascular events. (ClinicalTrials. gov number, NCT03015311).
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ISSN:0916-9636
1348-4214
1348-4214
DOI:10.1038/s41440-022-00852-0