White-Coat Hypertension: Pathophysiological and Clinical Aspects: Excellence Award for Hypertension Research 2020

Hypertension. 2021 Dec;78(6):1677-1688. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.121.16489. Epub 2021 Nov 10.

Abstract

Few issues of modern cardiovascular medicine have been as controversial as the relationship between white-coat hypertension (WCH), that is, a common condition in which office blood pressure is elevated while out-of-office blood pressure (ambulatory blood pressure or home blood pressure) is normal. While earlier studies showed no increased risk of cardiovascular events in WCH compared with the normotensive state, more recent studies have changed this conclusion by showing that an increased cardiovascular risk represents a trait of this hypertensive phenotype. The present article will review a number of issues related to WCH, that is, its definition, pathophysiological background, clinical alterations, and prognostic significance. This will be done by considering the available evidence published during the last decades, with special focus on the data collected in PAMELA (Pressioni Arteriose Monitorate e Loro Associazioni)-a research project performed with a cross-sectional and longitudinal design, which has provided a series of novel clinical information on WCH throughout the years. The final part of the article will discuss the therapeutic implications of the abovementioned evidence, as well as some controversial or still undefined issues related to WCH, whose investigation will be an important goal to pursue by future research.

Keywords: antihypertensive treatment; blood pressure; cardiovascular risk factors; goals; medicine; prognosis; therapeutics.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Awards and Prizes
  • Blood Pressure / physiology*
  • Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory*
  • Humans
  • Office Visits*
  • Research
  • White Coat Hypertension / physiopathology*