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Congenital heart disease (CHD) includes a wide variety of types of disease, including congenital abnormalities of the heart valves. This can range from bicuspid aortic valve and other aortic valve deformities to more complex disease such as tetralogy of Fallot.
For many kinds of CHD, the optimal timing of interventions remains unclear. For instance, in tetralogy of Fallot, there is still equipoise about when to offer pulmonary valve replacement (PVR), while in aortic regurgitation, some patients can remain stable for many years.
The primary focus of this study is to use continuous physiologic data (CPD), obtained using wearable biosensors (a type of biometric monitoring technology), to develop improved biomarkers of disease progression and prognosis from patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) who are pregnant while they are at home as well as looking at patients' experience and interaction with wearable biosensor technology at home.
Full description
Maternal cardiovascular disease (MCD) remains the leading cause of death in pregnant women, especially in the United States, where heart disease is on the rise. The worse outcomes disproportionately affect disadvantaged populations, including those with poor access to healthcare, and ethnic minorities. Reducing maternal mortality is a World Health Organization global health goal, and multiple efforts have been initiated to both study maternal cardiac disease as well as reduce morbidity and mortality. At least half of serious cardiac complications can be prevented with closer monitoring and adequate care. A multidisciplinary approach using the Cardio-obstetrics clinic model has been shown to improve outcomes in women with cardiovascular disease, but successful efforts have been limited to comprehensive care centers in larger cities. Over the past decades, there have also been advances in the risk assessment for pregnant women with cardiac disease, but all risk models have not been as accurate in validation models and further research is warranted.
Hemodynamic changes of pregnancy, during labor, and in the early postpartum period include a decrease in systemic vascular resistance (SVR) and increases in blood volume and heart rate, all resulting in increased cardiac output (CO). There is also an associated increase in ventricular muscle mass and end diastolic volumes with improved systolic function, but without a pathologic increase in end-diastolic pressures. Such hemodynamic and anatomic alterations can exacerbate underlying cardiac disease, as well as uncover previously unrecognized cardiovascular pathology, thereby increasing the risk of cardiac complications.12 Several cardiac complications during pregnancy and in the postpartum period are due to the inapt response to pregnancy with either an inability to augment CO or inability to tolerate the increased CO. Addressing maternal cardiac complications would require earlier detection and identification of those at risk.
Wearable derived biomarkers: Physiological health parameters derived from either non-invasive monitors or wearables allow continuous tracking of such parameters in an ambulatory state:
Masimo® noninvasive monitors (Masimo Corp, Irvine, CA) are FDA approved for use in adults and newborns to provide real time pulse oximetry (SpO2) and heart rate. Masimo has CE mark for additional parameters which include PVR, atrial fibrillation respiratory rate per minute (RRp), heart rate variability (HRV), and PVi. Clinical studies demonstrated they are motion-tolerant, report functional oxygen saturation, and validation in low perfusion conditions. Smart wristbands are an unobtrusive, and promising novel method to monitor ambulatory health parameters throughout pregnancy. The Masimo W1® wristband is FDA approved and uses clinically tested technology in a wearable patient-friendly format. Compliance with wearable devices has been demonstrated in a small study of 20 pregnant women where it was worn approximately 6 out of 7 months, with a slight drop in adherence postpartum.
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Inclusion criteria
Women evaluated in the cardio-obstetrics clinic either prepartum, intrapartum, or postpartum with congenital heart disease.
Congenital heart disease: Based on modified World Health Organization (mWHO) classification of maternal cardiovascular disease group ≥ II.
Congenital valvular heart disease:
Congenital Cardiomyopathy
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Age > 18 years of age
Exclusion criteria
50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Joanna Ghobrial, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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