Diagnostic accuracy of different exercise blood pressure metrics in identifying hypertension on 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in athletes.

Category Primary study
JournalJournal of human hypertension
Year 2025
Exercise blood pressure (BP) metrics have been promoted as a means of identifying latent or mild hypertension in athletes. We evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of four exercise BP metrics to diagnose hypertension, defined by 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) as mean ≥130/80 mmHg, daytime ≥135/85 mmHg and/or nighttime ≥120/70 mmHg. Fifty-four endurance-trained athletes (48 [IQR 24-58] years, 67% male) underwent exercise testing with serial BP measurements and 24-h ABPM. Exaggerated exercise BP (EEBP) was defined as exceeding a threshold for any of the four metrics: 1) maximal systolic BP (SBPmax) using published cut-offs; SBPmax ≥ 220 mmHg and ≥200 mmHg in males and females, respectively, 2) SBP/Workload-slope, 3) SBPmax/Workload-ratio, 4) SBP at 2 Watts/kg. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis and Youden's Index determined optimal cut-offs and diagnostic performance. Twelve of 54 (22%) athletes met criteria for hypertension. SBPmax was reasonably sensitive for identifying hypertension (83% identified) but demonstrated poor specificity (62% of non-hypertensives misclassified), with an area under the ROC-curve (AUC) of 0.63. An EEBP cut-off of SBP > 176 mmHg at 2 Watts/kg had the best diagnostic performance with 100% sensitivity, moderate specificity of 62%, and AUC of 0.79. Other metrics, incorporating exercise BP and workload, SBPmax/Workload-ratio and SBP/Workload-slope, had moderate diagnostic utility (AUC = 0.71 and 0.67, respectively). In endurance athletes, exercise BP metrics demonstrated modest and variable diagnostic accuracy for identifying hypertension on 24-h ABPM. Assessment of SBP at a relative submaximal workload provided acceptable diagnostic accuracy while reducing overdiagnosis associated with published SBPmax thresholds. Graphical Abstract - Created in BioRender. La Gerche, A. (2025) https://BioRender.com/undefined Abbreviations: SBP, systolic blood pressure; ABPM, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring.
Epistemonikos ID: d9e3b00251bbb447e49b9018d9e6cfbcf04bc2fe
First added on: Oct 23, 2025