The duration and homogeneity of the antihypertensive effect of a drug are commonly quantified by computation of the trough:peak ratio (T/P) from 24 h ambulatory blood pressure recordings [i.e. the ratio of the reduction in blood pressure at the end of the interval between doses (trough) and the reduction in blood pressure at the time of the maximal effect of a drug (peak)]. Although it is widely employed, this index has a lot of limitations: it makes use of only a small portion of a 24 h blood pressure recording; individual T/P values do not have a normal distribution, unless responders at peak are selected; it bears no relation to 24 h blood pressure variability; peak changes in blood pressure are affected by a placebo effect and thus T/P needs correction for effects of placebo; peak and trough changes in blood pressure are reproducible over time but T/P is not; and, finally, it was shown in the SAMPLE study that T/P is not correlated to changes in left ventricular mass induced by treatment, and thus has a limited clinical value.
Omboni, S., Parati, G., Mancia, G. (1998). The trough:peak ratio and the smoothness index in the evaluation of control of 24 h blood pressure by treatment in hypertension. BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING, 3(3), 201-204.
The trough:peak ratio and the smoothness index in the evaluation of control of 24 h blood pressure by treatment in hypertension
Parati, G;Mancia, G
1998
Abstract
The duration and homogeneity of the antihypertensive effect of a drug are commonly quantified by computation of the trough:peak ratio (T/P) from 24 h ambulatory blood pressure recordings [i.e. the ratio of the reduction in blood pressure at the end of the interval between doses (trough) and the reduction in blood pressure at the time of the maximal effect of a drug (peak)]. Although it is widely employed, this index has a lot of limitations: it makes use of only a small portion of a 24 h blood pressure recording; individual T/P values do not have a normal distribution, unless responders at peak are selected; it bears no relation to 24 h blood pressure variability; peak changes in blood pressure are affected by a placebo effect and thus T/P needs correction for effects of placebo; peak and trough changes in blood pressure are reproducible over time but T/P is not; and, finally, it was shown in the SAMPLE study that T/P is not correlated to changes in left ventricular mass induced by treatment, and thus has a limited clinical value.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.