This study assessed whether 2 common surrogate measures of the "white-coat effect," namely the clinic-daytime and the clinic-home differences in blood pressure (BP), were attenuated by long-term antihypertensive treatment and whether this attenuation is relevant to the treatment-induced regression of left ventricular hypertrophy, thus having clinical significance. We considered data from 206 patients with essential hypertension (aged 20 to 65 years) who had a diastolic BP between 95 and 115 mm Hg and echocardiographic evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy. In each patient, clinic BP, 24-hour ambulatory BP, and left ventricular mass index were assessed at baseline, after 3 and 12 months of treatment with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, and after a final 4-week placebo run-off period. At baseline, the clinic-daytime differences in systolic and diastolic BP were 12.1+/-15.4 and 6.8+/-10.1 mm Hg, respectively; the corresponding values for the clinic-home differences were 5.7+/-10.6 and 2.9+/-6.1 mm Hg, respectively. These differences were reduced by 57.6% and 77.1% (P<0.01) and by 65.7% and 64.3% (P<0.01), respectively, after 12 months of treatment, with a partial return toward the pretreatment differences after the final placebo period. The observed treatment-induced reductions in left ventricular mass index and those in the clinic-daytime or clinic-home differences for systolic and diastolic BP showed no significant relationship when tested by multiple regression analysis. This provides the first longitudinal evidence that clinic-daytime and clinic-home differences in BP have no substantial value in predicting the regression of target organ damage, such as left ventricular hypertrophy, that has prognostic relevance.