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Self-monitoring of blood pressure following a stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TASMIN5S): a randomised controlled trial

Self-monitoring of blood pressure following a stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TASMIN5S): a randomised controlled trial
Self-monitoring of blood pressure following a stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TASMIN5S): a randomised controlled trial
Background: blood pressure (BP) control following stroke is important but currently sub-optimal. This trial aimed to determine whether self-monitoring of hypertension with telemonitoring and a treatment escalation protocol, results in lower BP than usual care in people with previous stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA).

Methods: unblinded randomised controlled trial, comparing a BP telemonitoring-based intervention with control (usual care) for hypertension management in 12 primary care practices in England. People with previous stroke or TIA with clinic systolic BP 130–180 mmHg, taking ≤ 3 antihypertensive medications and on stable treatment for at least four weeks were randomised 1:1 using secure online system to intervention or control. The BP:Together intervention comprised self-monitoring of blood pressure with a digital behavioural intervention which supported telemonitoring of self-monitored BP with feedback to clinicians and patients regarding medication titration. The planned primary outcome was difference in clinic measured systolic BP 12 months from randomisation but was not available following early study termination due to withdrawal of funding during the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, in addition to pre-randomised data, routinely recorded BP was extracted from electronic patient records both pre- and post-randomisation and presented descriptively only. An intention to treat approach was taken.

Results: from 650 postal invitations, 129 (20%) responded, of whom 95 people had been screened for eligibility prior to the pandemic (November 2019-March 2020) and 55 (58%) were randomised. Pre-randomisation routinely recorded mean BP was 145/78 mmHg in the control (n = 26) and 145/79 mmHg in the self-monitoring (n = 21) groups. Post-randomisation mean BP was 134/73 mmHg in the control (n = 19) and 130/75 mmHg in the self-monitoring (n = 25) groups. Participants randomised to self-monitoring used the intervention for ≥ 7 months in 25/27 (93%) of cases.

Conclusions: recruitment of people with stroke/TIA to a trial comparing a BP self-monitoring and digital behavioural intervention to usual care was feasible prior to the COVID-19 pandemic and the vast majority of those randomised to intervention used it while the trial was running. Routinely recorded blood pressure control improved in both groups. Digital interventions including self-monitoring are feasible for people with stroke/TIA and should be definitively evaluated in future trials.

Trial registration: ISRCTN57946500 06/09/2019 Prospective.
hypertension, blood pressure, stroke, TIA, self monitoring
1471-2261
McManus, R.J.
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Smith, A.
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Temple, E.
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Yu, L.M.
73ff43d2-e1cd-458f-bf63-834d6ec09f50
Allen, J.
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Doogue, R.
be1bbce0-892c-4d39-b804-a0dad3b8de3d
Ford, G.A.
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Glynn, L.
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Guthrie, B.
806b16e2-098c-4fa9-94db-f6f022bd1173
Hall, P.
d94fc973-0aac-4c84-b8af-1601491aedf9
Hinton, L.
177e60b0-f34c-4c40-b3b4-c130eea37f93
Hobbs, F.D.R.
044eb974-b988-44de-aaed-fa40d4c6b56c
Mant, J.
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McKinstry, B.
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Mead, G.
60583a3b-f960-496d-9a45-29424741645f
Morton, K.
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Rai, T.
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Rice, C.
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Roman, C.
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Stoddart, A.
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Tarassenko, L.
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Velardo, C.
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Williams, M.
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Yardley, L.
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et al.
on behalf of the TASMIN5S investigators
McManus, R.J.
2359e2b2-581a-4bd1-a009-50becb00372c
Smith, A.
cf4d3f00-440f-4e95-a95a-407ef53793fa
Temple, E.
02a2b007-950c-45dd-93e7-489ae924fe7f
Yu, L.M.
73ff43d2-e1cd-458f-bf63-834d6ec09f50
Allen, J.
0ac4556e-d512-4316-b263-60bae62e239a
Doogue, R.
be1bbce0-892c-4d39-b804-a0dad3b8de3d
Ford, G.A.
58ae9408-dffd-4223-970e-67011a24af90
Glynn, L.
37c65ca0-0839-4eee-8a40-d081ac8f72f2
Guthrie, B.
806b16e2-098c-4fa9-94db-f6f022bd1173
Hall, P.
d94fc973-0aac-4c84-b8af-1601491aedf9
Hinton, L.
177e60b0-f34c-4c40-b3b4-c130eea37f93
Hobbs, F.D.R.
044eb974-b988-44de-aaed-fa40d4c6b56c
Mant, J.
cb9dbdd7-7e9a-43e3-b977-266ad88a082f
McKinstry, B.
f0fb5143-cbe7-49c2-b1d5-8c5b1d8cf960
Mead, G.
60583a3b-f960-496d-9a45-29424741645f
Morton, K.
6fa41cd3-ba4d-476c-9020-b8ef93c7ade7
Rai, T.
1cdfb4fe-b023-479e-90e7-068bd4571509
Rice, C.
cfb0acc9-2bc3-4279-89bf-1074384f00de
Roman, C.
071d86b5-2326-4e58-bfc2-eb21492b14d6
Stoddart, A.
9b059143-7671-4316-84d2-be64c14dc04f
Tarassenko, L.
c02e9ee3-35d4-444b-8979-1958c8f0f896
Velardo, C.
fc11f067-baf0-45a1-8226-8d515b7c093f
Williams, M.
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Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e

McManus, R.J., Smith, A. and Temple, E. , et al. and on behalf of the TASMIN5S investigators (2024) Self-monitoring of blood pressure following a stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TASMIN5S): a randomised controlled trial. BMC Cardiovascular Disorders, 24, [746]. (doi:10.1186/s12872-024-04320-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: blood pressure (BP) control following stroke is important but currently sub-optimal. This trial aimed to determine whether self-monitoring of hypertension with telemonitoring and a treatment escalation protocol, results in lower BP than usual care in people with previous stroke or transient ischaemic attack (TIA).

Methods: unblinded randomised controlled trial, comparing a BP telemonitoring-based intervention with control (usual care) for hypertension management in 12 primary care practices in England. People with previous stroke or TIA with clinic systolic BP 130–180 mmHg, taking ≤ 3 antihypertensive medications and on stable treatment for at least four weeks were randomised 1:1 using secure online system to intervention or control. The BP:Together intervention comprised self-monitoring of blood pressure with a digital behavioural intervention which supported telemonitoring of self-monitored BP with feedback to clinicians and patients regarding medication titration. The planned primary outcome was difference in clinic measured systolic BP 12 months from randomisation but was not available following early study termination due to withdrawal of funding during the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, in addition to pre-randomised data, routinely recorded BP was extracted from electronic patient records both pre- and post-randomisation and presented descriptively only. An intention to treat approach was taken.

Results: from 650 postal invitations, 129 (20%) responded, of whom 95 people had been screened for eligibility prior to the pandemic (November 2019-March 2020) and 55 (58%) were randomised. Pre-randomisation routinely recorded mean BP was 145/78 mmHg in the control (n = 26) and 145/79 mmHg in the self-monitoring (n = 21) groups. Post-randomisation mean BP was 134/73 mmHg in the control (n = 19) and 130/75 mmHg in the self-monitoring (n = 25) groups. Participants randomised to self-monitoring used the intervention for ≥ 7 months in 25/27 (93%) of cases.

Conclusions: recruitment of people with stroke/TIA to a trial comparing a BP self-monitoring and digital behavioural intervention to usual care was feasible prior to the COVID-19 pandemic and the vast majority of those randomised to intervention used it while the trial was running. Routinely recorded blood pressure control improved in both groups. Digital interventions including self-monitoring are feasible for people with stroke/TIA and should be definitively evaluated in future trials.

Trial registration: ISRCTN57946500 06/09/2019 Prospective.

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McMANUS - 2024 - BMC CARDIOVAS DISORD - Self monitoring of blood pressure TASMIN5S - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 November 2024
Published date: 27 December 2024
Keywords: hypertension, blood pressure, stroke, TIA, self monitoring

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497718
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497718
ISSN: 1471-2261
PURE UUID: 3f538829-e0be-4706-9863-0e4853cd00c7
ORCID for K. Morton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6674-0314
ORCID for L. Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 30 Jan 2025 17:34
Last modified: 31 Jan 2025 02:47

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Contributors

Author: R.J. McManus
Author: A. Smith
Author: E. Temple
Author: L.M. Yu
Author: J. Allen
Author: R. Doogue
Author: G.A. Ford
Author: L. Glynn
Author: B. Guthrie
Author: P. Hall
Author: L. Hinton
Author: F.D.R. Hobbs
Author: J. Mant
Author: B. McKinstry
Author: G. Mead
Author: K. Morton ORCID iD
Author: T. Rai
Author: C. Rice
Author: C. Roman
Author: A. Stoddart
Author: L. Tarassenko
Author: C. Velardo
Author: M. Williams
Author: L. Yardley ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.
Corporate Author: on behalf of the TASMIN5S investigators

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