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This study has been designed to describe the use of Remote Patient Management (RPM) systems equipped with sensors for the measurement of weight and blood pressure in an Italian health care setting, verifying their efficacy and efficiency for the remote management of heart failure patients with implantable defibrillators. Moreover, their ease of use and acceptance by physician and patient will be assessed.
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Based on positive outcomes from numerous randomized, controlled trials, the current European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines and current American guidelines for the management of chronic heart failure include the implantable defibrillators as a standard of care in selected chronic heart failure patients .
Heart failure patients with implantable defibrillators often visit the hospital for unscheduled examinations, placing a great burden on healthcare providers. Device manufacturers offer a technology for remote defibrillator monitoring with the purpose of allowing physicians to remotely access patients' data and reducing unnecessary routine and interim visits. The Evolution of Management Strategies of Heart Failure Patients With Implantable Defibrillators (EVOLVO) study was a multicenter randomized trial designed to assess whether remote management can reduce emergency healthcare use in heart failure patients implanted with defibrillators endowed with specific diagnostic features compared with standard management consisting of scheduled in-office visits and patient response to audible alerts. Over 16 months, the rate of emergency department or urgent in-office visits for heart failure, arrhythmias, or device-related events decreased by 35% and total healthcare visits were 21% less frequent with remote monitoring.
The study confirmed that remote management of heart failure patients implanted with defibrillators allows timely notification of potentially critical situations. Moreover, it has the effect of shifting healthcare visits from the emergency department to the clinic and increasing the appropriateness of in-office visits, thereby reducing costs and the burden on the healthcare system.
Nonetheless, in the EVOLVO study these findings were obtained with defibrillators equipped with specific diagnostic and alerting capabilities, and thus they cannot be fully extended to different technologies. In particular, defibrillators were equipped with these alert capability for the detection of possible fluid accumulation and decompensation, and these alerts accounted for the majority of endpoints recorded during the study.
That alert was shown to be associated with a relatively high rate of false positive detections , and the Diagnostic Outcome Trial in Heart Failure (DOT-HF) recently showed an increased number of hospital admissions among patients with the audible alert enabled.
Alternative systems of RPM (Remote Patient Management) allow recording of the body weight and blood pressure for the management of heart failure. Continuous monitoring of these variables is a fundamental element of the programs of patient monitoring and patient education recommended by the guidelines for the treatment of heart failure.
Although the daily measure of body weight and pressure is present in most telemedicine programs described in the literature , , clinical evidence obtained specifically in the population of patients referred to the implantable defibrillator therapy is scarce. The large observational study ALTITUDE has suggested the possibility of a better prognosis of patients managed via RPM, in particular if provided with sensors for the measurement of weight and pressure.
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186 participants in 1 patient group
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Maurizio Eugenio Landolina
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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