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Burden of HF in India is approximate 2-5 million patients with an estimated prevalence of 2-3/1000 population. HF is responsible for approx1.8 million admissions annually in India. Very few studies are there in India which shows the detailed documentation of HF.
Manipal Heart failure Registry (MHFR) is an institutional level Heart Failure disease registry. In MHFR the investigator will document the detailed information about heart failure patients admitted or referred to Department of Cardiology, Kasturba Medical College, a constituent college and teaching hospital of Manipal University.
MHFR will include cohorts of patients with acute heart failure (AHF), with the intention of implementing a long-term follow-up, the use of health economic assessment to evaluate the degree of resource utilization; and quantifying the burden on quality of life for patients. Utilization of drug in HF patients will be evaluated as a part of this study to prevent the use of inappropriate drug therapy and to improve overall drug effectiveness and outcomes. Hence the protocol sought to identify the characteristics and long-term outcomes of Indian patients with acute heart failure admitted in an Indian tertiary care center in South India.
There are no risks to patients participating in the registry study, as standard of care quality will not be affected. It is unlikely that there will be any direct benefit as a result of participation in the HF-disease registry. However, the information contained within this non-interventional registry study will be used for research studies directed at improving the knowledge and treatment of acute heart failure as well as improving patients treatment in the future.
The potential impact of proposed research (Manipal Heart Failure Registry) is envisioned to be four-fold:
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RESEARCH GAPS IDENTIFIED:
Only a couple of registry studies in India have followed patients for not more than one year and therefore long-term data on disease management and healthcare resource utilization and health economics has never addressed adequately. Typically, these studies have focused primarily upon inpatient HF clinical profiles, where detailed long-term documentation of cardiac function, treatment patterns, and outcomes is lacking.
HYPOTHESES:
Long term follow up of heart failure patients can identify the disease characteristics, clinical outcomes and help in the development of a disease progression model, thereby eventually improving the practice standards. Proper utilization of healthcare resources decrease in-hospital and follow up mortality in heart failure patients.
The study team also hypothesize that the commonest cause of acute heart failure in our population in present era is myocardial infarction.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
This proposed observational study is a single center HF-disease registry that will document the routine patterns of diagnosis and medical care for heart failure as well as treatment type, long-term HF-related clinical events, and re-admission rates following the acute admission index event. In addition to the long-term data collection, the study will also link treatment plans and clinical outcomes, to identify best practice in the HF treatment, as well as extent of healthcare resources use. The registry will also collect data on health-related quality of life.
Eligible patients and caregivers may only be included in the study after providing written (witnessed, where required by law or regulation), IRB/IEC-approved informed consent, or, if incapable of doing so, after such consent has been provided by a legally acceptable representative of the patient.
RISKS AND BENEFITS There are no risks to patients participating in the registry study, as standard of care quality will not be affected. It is unlikely that there will be any direct benefit as a result of participation in the HF-disease registry. However, the information contained within this non-interventional registry study will be used for research studies directed at improving the knowledge and treatment of acute heart failure as well as improving patients' treatment in the future.
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Yeshwanth R Karkala, MBBS, MD; Ajit Singh, PHARM D, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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