Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This study aims to assess whether patients with acute heart failure (HF) can achieve the same level of HF-therapies by digital follow-up at home as compared to hospital visits according to the STRONG-HF strategy. Patients admitted to hospital with acute HF will be enrolled and randomized to either follow-up at the hospital out-patient clinic or digital follow-up at home.
Full description
This study seeks to enhance the management of HF patients by demonstrating that follow-up and medication up-titration can be effectively carried out digitally at home, thereby relieving the burden on healthcare systems and patients. There exists a substantial knowledge gap in the implementation of life-saving HF drugs that have been shown to significantly reduce mortality in HF patients, by as much as 73%. Despite strong evidence from clinical trials and guidelines, the utilization of optimal HF therapy among patients remains low. The successful STRONG-HF trial demonstrated improved outcomes through early and rapid up-titration of HF medications and follow-up at specialized HF clinics after discharge, and this strategy is now strongly recommended in the updated European Society of Cardiology Heart Failure Guidelines from 2023. However, a major challenge was the need for patients to travel to the hospital for weekly visits, which posed significant barriers for many patients, especially in geographically dispersed regions due to travel distance, immobility, and logistical challenges. To address this gap, the STRONG@HOME trial aims to conduct visits and rapid up-titration of medications in the patient's home, a strategy not previously tested in a clinical trial and with direct clinical implications. The success of this approach has the potential to improve HF care globally and advance the field of implementation science in HF and other chronic diseases.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
450 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Henrik Schirmer, MD, PhD; Peder L Myhre, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal