| Literature DB >> 25768664 |
Spyros Kitsiou1, Guy Paré, Mirou Jaana.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Growing interest on the effects of home telemonitoring on patients with chronic heart failure (HF) has led to a rise in the number of systematic reviews addressing the same or very similar research questions with a concomitant increase in discordant findings. Differences in the scope, methods of analysis, and methodological quality of systematic reviews can cause great confusion and make it difficult for policy makers and clinicians to access and interpret the available evidence and for researchers to know where knowledge gaps in the extant literature exist.Entities:
Keywords: ambulatory monitoring; chronic diseases; continuity of patient care; heart failure; home care services; home telemonitoring; meta-analysis; physiologic monitoring; remote consultation; remote monitoring; review; systematic review; telehealth; telemedicine; umbrella review
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25768664 PMCID: PMC4376138 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.4174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Inclusion criteria for the selection of relevant systematic reviews.
| Criteria categories | Description of inclusion criteria |
| Study type | Systematic reviews (with or without meta-analysis) of original, interventional studies. Following the definitions used by the Cochrane Collaboration and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement, a systematic review was defined as a review that attempts to search, identify, appraise, and collate all empirical evidence that fits pre-specified eligibility criteria to answer a clearly stated set of objectives or specific research question(s), using explicit and systematic methods with a view to minimizing risk of bias. |
| Publication type | Full, peer-reviewed articles published in English. |
| Population | Patients with definitive diagnosis of HF. |
| Intervention | HT defined as the use of non-invasive devices in conjunction with information and communication technologies to monitor and electronically transmit physiological, biometric, and/or disease-related data (eg, arterial blood pressure, weight, cardiac rate, medications, symptoms) from the patient at home to the health care provider responsible for monitoring remotely the patient’s health status. |
| Comparisons | Standard (usual) care or other non–home telemonitoring approaches. |
| Outcomes | Primary or secondary outcomes pertaining to the clinical, structural, behavioral, or economic effects of HT. More specifically, systematic reviews reporting at least one of the following outcomes and having met the abovementioned criteria were eligible for inclusion: mortality, all-cause hospitalizations, HF-related hospitalizations, emergency department visits, clinic/outpatient visits, quality of life, cost-effectiveness, patient satisfaction, acceptability, and compliance/adherence. |
Figure 1Selection process of the systematic reviews.
Characteristics of included systematic reviews.
| Authors (year) | Years searched | Number and design of HT studies | Population (mean age; disease severity) | Intervention (length of follow-up) | Control group | Main conclusions |
| Clark et al (2007) [ | 2002 to May 2006 | 5 RCTs | 807 patients (mean age range 57-75; NYHA class I-IV) | HT without home visits (Follow-up: 3-16 months) | Usual care | HT reduced all-cause mortality and HF-related hospitalizations |
| Results were mixed for quality of life and costs | ||||||
| Inglis et al, 2010 [ | 2002 to Nov. 2008 | 14 RCTs | 2710 patients (mean age range 57-78 years; NYHA class I-IV; most II-IV) | HT without home visits (Follow-up: 3-15 months) | Usual care | HT reduced the risk of all-cause mortality and HF-related hospitalizations |
| HT improved quality of life and reduced costs | ||||||
| No consistent impact on length of stay | ||||||
| Polisena et al, 2010 [ | 1998-2008 | 21 studies (11 RCTs, 10 observational) | 3082 patients (mean age range 52-79; NYHA class I-IV; most III-IV) | HT with or without home visits (Follow-up: 1-12 months) | Usual care | HT reduced mortality and hospitalizations |
| Patient quality of life with HT was similar or better than with usual care | ||||||
| Clarke et al, 2011 [ | 1969 to Oct. 2009 | 13 RCTs | 3480 patients (mean age range 55-85 years; NYHA class I-IV) | HT interventions with or without home visits (Follow-up: 3-15 months) | Usual care | HT reduced all-cause mortality and HF hospitalizations |
| HT in conjunction with nurse home visiting and specialist unit support can be effective in the clinical management of patients with HF and help improve their quality of life | ||||||
| Pandor et al, 2013 [ | 2002 to Jan. 2012 | 20 RCTs [10 RCTs of recently discharged patients (≤28 days) + 10 RCTs of patients with stable HF] | 6561 patients [1918 recently discharged patients (mean age range 57-78 years; NYHA class: I-IV; most II-IV); 4643 patients with stable HF (mean age not summarized; NYHA class: I-IV)] | HT without home visits using patient-initiated external electronic devices with transfer of physiological data from the patient to the health care provider by landline or mobile phone, cable network or broadband technology (Follow-up: 3-12 months, recently discharged patients; 6-22 months, patients with stable HF) | Usual care | HT with medical support provided during office hours showed beneficial trends in reducing all-cause mortality for recently discharged patients with HF. However, these effects were statistically inconclusive |
| Where usual care is below average or suboptimal, the impact of remote monitoring is likely to be greater | ||||||
| Louis et al, 2003 [ | 1966-2002 | 24 studies (6 RCTs, 12 observational) | 2629 patients (mean age range 53-82 years; NYHA class: I-IV; most II-IV) | HT of patients using special telecare devices in conjunction with a telecommunication system (Follow-up: 2-18 months) | Usual care, home visits, and/or nurse telephone support | HT improved mortality, yet adequately powered multicenter RCTs are required to further evaluate the potential benefits and cost-effectiveness of this intervention |
| Martínez et al, 2006 [ | 1966 to April 2004 | 42 studies (13 reports of 10 RCTs, 29 observational) | 2303 patients (5 studies did not specify number of participants) (mean age range 48-83; NYHA class I-IV; most II-IV) | HT using peripheral devices for measuring and automatically transmitting physiological data (Follow-up: 1-24 months) | Usual care, home nurse visits, pre/post HT | Reduces hospital readmissions, length of stay, mortality, emergency visits, and costs |
| It is viable, easy to use, and is widely accepted by patients and health professionals | ||||||
| Paré et al, 2007 [ | 1990-2006 | 16 studies (7 reports of 5 RCTs, 9 observational) | Not summarized | HT as an automated process for the transmission of patient health status data (Follow-up: 1 to 36 months) | Usual care, home visits, pre/post HT | Promising patient management |
| Future studies need to build evidence related to its clinical effects, cost effectiveness, impacts on services utilization, and acceptance by health care providers | ||||||
| Chaudhry et al, 2007 [ | 1966 to Aug. 2006 | 4 RCTs | 774 patients with HF (mean age range 59-70 years; NYHA class I-IV) | HT with or without home visits (Follow-up: not summarized) | Usual care, home visits | HT may be an effective strategy for disease management in high-risk heart failure patients , but the evidence base is currently quite limited |
| Seto 2008 [ | up to April 2007 | 10 studies (5 RCTs, 4 observational, 1 survey) | 1394 patients with HF (mean age range 58-74 years; NYHA not summarized) | HT with a component of home physiological measurement (Follow-up: 2-36 months) | Usual care, home visits, pre/post HT | All studies found cost reductions (range: 1.6% to 68.3%) mostly related to reduced hospitalization expenditures |
| Dang et al, 2009 [ | 1966 to Apr. 2009 | 9 RCTs | 2020 adult patients with HF (mean age range 53-79 years; NYHA class II-IV) | Home telehealth remote monitoring (ie automated or physiologic monitoring of signs and symptoms; two-way video monitoring with or without physiologic monitoring; Internet, Internet Protocol, or Web-based technologies or image capture and transfer) (Follow-up: 3-12 months) | Usual care, home visits | Telemonitoring is a promising strategy. |
| More research required to determine the ideal patient population, technology, and parameters, frequency and duration of telemonitoring, and the exact combination of case management and close monitoring that would assure consistent and improved outcomes with cost reductions in HF | ||||||
| Maric et al, 2009 [ | Up to Aug. 2007 | 42 studies; 52 references (12 RCTs, 30 observational) | 4290 patients (9 studies did not specify number of participants) (mean age and NYHA class not summarized) | HT using modalities that transmit data to health care professionals to assist in self-monitoring (eg, telephone-based touch pad, website based modalities, video consultations, and other technology-assisted devices) (Follow-up: 1-18 months) | Usual care, home visits, nurse telephone support, pre/post HT | Most studies demonstrated improvements in outcome measures, including improved QoL and decreased hospitalizations. However, not all studies reported the same improvements and in several cases the sample sizes were relatively small |
| Paré et al, 2010 [ | 1966-2008 | 17 studies (13 reports of 10 RCTs, 4 observational) | Not summarized | HT interventions in which physiological and biological data are transferred from the patients’ home to the telemonitoring center to monitor patients, interpret the data, and make clinical decisions (Follow-up: not summarized) | Usual care, home visits, pre/post HT | Many studies failed to show a reduction in either mortality or hospitalization rates, although a few trials have reported a trend towards shorter lengths of stay in hospital. |
| Due to the equivocal nature of current findings of HT involving patients with HF, larger trials are still needed to confirm the clinical effects of this technology for these patients. | ||||||
| Kraai et al, 2011 [ | Up to November 2010 | 14 studies (4 RCTs, 10 observational) | 2005 patients (mean age range 50-78; NYHA not summarized) | Noninvasive remote monitoring with external equipment to measure physiologic data such as weight and blood pressure (Follow-up: not summarized) | Usual care, home visits, nurse telephone support, pre/post HT | In general, patients seemed to be satisfied or very satisfied with HT |
| Giamouzis et al, 2012 [ | 2001 to Nov. 2011 | 12 RCTs | 3877 patients (mean age range 57-78; NYHA class I-IV; most II-IV) | HT with at least one device that measured physiological data provided by the researchers for home use (Length of follow-up: 6 to 26 months) | Usual care | Currently available trial results tend to be in favor of HT |
| HT was highly acceptable by HF patients |
Characterization of HT technologies in systematic reviews.
| Author (year) | Does the review present information from all studies about the types of HT technologies used in the intervention group? | Does the review present information from all studies about the types of physiological parameters monitored in the intervention group? | Does the review classify and analyze studies according to the different types of HT technologies? |
| Inglis et al (2010) [ | Yes | Yes | No |
| Clark et al (2007) [ | Yes | Yes | No |
| Giamouzis et al (2012) [ | No | Yes | No |
| Pandor et al (2013) [ | No | Yes | No |
| Polisena et al (2010) [ | Yes | Yes | No |
| Clarke et al (2011) [ | No | No | No |
| Chaudhry et al (2007) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Dang et al (2009) [ | Yes | Yes | No |
| Louis et al (2003) [ | No | Yes | No |
| Martinez et al (2006) [ | No | No | No |
| Paré et al (2010) [ | No | No | No |
| Kraai et al (2011) [ | No | No | No |
| Maric et al (2009) [ | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Seto (2008) [ | Yes | Yes | No |
| Paré et al (2007) [ | No | No | No |
Outcomes reported by the systematic reviewsa.
| Author (year) | ACM | ACH | HFH | HOSP | Costs | QoL | LoS | CA | ACC | ER | PS | OV |
| Inglis et al (2010) [ | X | X | X |
| X | X | X | X | X |
|
|
|
| Clark et al (2007) [ | X | X | X |
| X | X |
| X | X |
|
|
|
| Giamouzis et al (2012) [ | X |
|
| X | X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Pandor et al (2013) [ | X | X | X |
|
| X | X | X | X |
| X |
|
| Polisena et al (2010) [ | X | X | X |
|
| X | X |
|
| X | X | X |
| Clarke et al (2011) [ | X | X | X |
| X | X | X | X | X | X |
|
|
| Chaudhry et al (2007) [ | X | X | X |
| X |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Dang et al (2009) [ | X | X | X |
| X |
| X |
|
| X |
| X |
| Louis et al (2003) [ | X |
|
| X | X |
|
| X | X |
|
|
|
| Martinez et al (2006) [ | X |
|
| X | X | X | X |
| X |
|
|
|
| Paré et al (2010) [ | X |
|
| X |
|
| X |
|
|
|
|
|
| Kraai et al (2011) [ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| X |
|
| Maric et al (2009) [ |
|
|
| X | X | X |
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|
| X |
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|
| Seto (2008) [ |
|
|
|
| X |
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| Paré et al (2007) [ |
|
|
| X | X | X | X | X |
| X |
|
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aACM: all-cause mortality; ACH: all-cause hospitalizations; HFH: HF-related hospitalizations; HOSP: Hospitalizations (indicates reviews that did not make a distinction between all-cause and HF-related hospitalizations); Costs: Cost Savings; QoL: Quality of life; LoS: Length of stay; CA: Compliance; ACC: Acceptability; ER: Emergency room visits; PS: Patient satisfaction; OV: Outpatient visits.
Methodological quality of systematic reviews based on AMSTAR criteria and scores.a,b
| Author (year) | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Q5 | Q6 | Q7 | Q8 | Q9 | Q10 | Q11 | Total |
| Inglis et al (2010) [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | 10 |
| Pandor et al (2013) [ | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | 9 |
| Polisena et al (2010) [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | 8 |
| Clark et al (2007) [ | N | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | N | 7 |
| Chaudhry et al (2007) [ | N | CA | Y | CA | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | N/A | N | 5 |
| Dang et al (2009) [ | N | CA | Y | N | Y | Y | N | N | Y | N/A | N | 4 |
| Paré et al (2010) [ | Y | Y | N | N | Y | N | N | N | Y | N/A | N | 4 |
| Louis et al (2003) [ | N | CA | Y | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | N/A | N | 3 |
| Martinez et al (2006) [ | N | CA | Y | Y | N | Y | N | N | N | N/A | N | 3 |
| Giamouzis et al (2012) [ | N | CA | Y | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N/A | N | 2 |
| Clarke et al (2011) [ | N | CA | Y | N | CA | N | N | N | N | Y | N | 2 |
| Kraai et al (2011) [ | N | CA | N | N | N | Y | N | N | Y | N/A | N | 2 |
| Maric et al (2009) [ | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | Y | N/A | N | 2 |
| Seto (2008) [ | N | CA | N | N | N | Y | N | N | Y | N/A | N | 2 |
| Paré et al (2007) [ | N | CA | Y | N | N | N | N | N | N | N/A | N | 1 |
aQ1: A priori design; Q2: Duplicate study selection and data extraction; Q3: Search comprehensiveness; Q4: Inclusion of grey literature; Q5: Included and excluded studies provided; Q6: Characteristics of the included studies provided; Q7: Scientific quality of the primary studies assessed and documented; Q8: Scientific quality of included studies used appropriately in formulating conclusions; Q9: Appropriateness of methods used to combine studies’ findings; Q10: Likelihood of publication bias was assessed; Q11: Conflict of interest – potential sources of support were clearly acknowledged in both the systematic review and the included studies.
b“Y” (Yes): Criterion met; “N” (No): Criterion not met; CA: Cannot answer; N/A: Not applicable. We awarded one point to each item that scored “yes” and summed these to calculate a total score for each review.
Taxonomy of HT systematic reviews according to key elements.
| Comparisons | Systematic reviews | AMSTAR score | Review characteristics |
| 1 | Inglis et al (2010) [ | 10 | Population: Stable and recently discharged patients |
| Clark et al (2007) [ | 7 | ||
| Giamouzis et al (2012) [ | 2 | ||
| 2 | Pandor et al (2013) [ | 9 | Population: Recently discharged patients (≤28 days) |
| 3 | Pandor et al (2013) [ | 9 | Population: Patients with stable heart failure |
| 4 | Pandor et al (2013) [ | 9 | Population: Patients with stable heart failure |
| 5 | Polisena et al (2010) [ | 8 | Population: Stable and recently discharged patients |
| Clarke et al (2011) [ | 2 | ||
| 6 | Chaudhry et al (2007) [ | 5 | Population: Stable and recently discharged patients |
| Dang et al (2009) [ | 4 | ||
| Paré et al (2010) [ | 4 | ||
| Martinez et al (2006) [ | 3 | ||
| Louis et al (2003) [ | 3 | ||
| Kraai et al (2011) [ | 2 | ||
| Maric et al (2009) [ | 2 | ||
| Seto (2008) [ | 2 | ||
| Paré et al (2007) [ | 1 |
Summary of findings from the meta-analyses with the most direct evidence in each group for the outcome of all-cause mortality.a-g
| Outcome: Comparison | Number of participants (studies), | Quality of evidence, | Relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effects | ||
| Risk with comparator | Risk difference with HT (95% CI) | |||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Stable and recently discharged patients | 2710 (11 studies) | MODERATE due to risk of biase | RR 0.66 (0.54 to 0.81) | 154 per 1000 | 52 fewer per 1000 (from 29 fewer to 71 fewer) |
|
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours or 24/7, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | |||||
|
| Comparator group: usual care | |||||
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| ||||||
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| Population: Recently discharged patients (≤28 days) | 1234 (8 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias and imprecision e,f | HR 0.62 (0.42 to 0.89)g | 139 per 1000 | 50 fewer per 1000 (from 14 fewer to 78 fewer) |
|
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | |||||
|
| Comparator group: usual care | |||||
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| ||||||
|
| Population: Patients with stable heart failure | 1501 (7 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias and imprecisione,f | HR 0.85 (0.59 to 1.2)g | 99 per 1000 | 14 fewer per 1000 (from 39 fewer to 19 more) |
|
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | |||||
|
| Comparator group: usual care | |||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Patients with stable heart failure | 1258 (3 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias and imprecisione,f | HR 0.85 (0.58 to 1.27)g | 143 per 1000 | 20 fewer per 1000 (from 57 fewer to 35 more) |
|
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided 24/7, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | |||||
|
| Comparator group: usual care | |||||
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| ||||||
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| Population: Stable and recently discharged patients | 1200 (5 studies) | MODERATE due to risk of biase | RR 0.60 (0.45 to 0.81) | 164 per 1000 | 65 fewer per 1000 (from 31 fewer to 90 fewer) |
|
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours or 24/7, with or without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | |||||
|
| Comparator group: usual care | |||||
aHigh quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
bModerate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
cLow quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
dVery low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
eMost trials did not provide details of random sequence generation, allocation concealment, and blinding of data analysts or assessors (see Multimedia Appendix 5).
fThe optimal information size criterion was not met by the meta-analysis (power <80%).
g95% credible intervals (Bayesian meta-analysis).
Summary of findings from the meta-analyses with the most direct evidence in each group for the outcome of all-cause hospitalizations.a-h
| Outcome: Comparison | Number of participants (studies) | Quality of evidence | Relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effects | ||
| Risk with comparator | Risk difference with HT (95% CI) | |||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Stable and recently discharged patients | 2343 (8 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias, inconsistency, and imprecisione-g | RR 0.91 (0.84 to 0.99) | 521 per 1000 | 47 fewer per 1000 (from 5 fewer to 83 fewer) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours or 24/7, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Recently discharged patients (≤28 days) | 831 (5 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias, inconsistency, imprecisione-g | HR 0.67 (0.42 to 0.97)h | 569 per 1000 | 138 fewer per 1000 (from 11 fewer to 271 fewer) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Patients with stable heart failure | 1267 (5 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias, imprecisione,f | HR 1.17 (0.89 to 1.59)h | 357 per 1000 | 47 more per 1000 (from 32 fewer to 148 more) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Patients with stable heart failure | 1258 (3 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias, inconsistency, imprecisione-g | HR 0.84 (0.54 to 1.15)h | 474 per 1000 | 57 fewer per 1000 (from 181 fewer to 48 more) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided 24/7, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
|
| ||||||
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| Population: Stable and recently discharged patients | 787 (3 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias, imprecisione,f | RR 0.79 (0.66 to 0.94) | 438 per 1000 | 92 fewer per 1000 (from 26 fewer to 149 fewer) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours or 24/7, with or without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
aHigh quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
bModerate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
cLow quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
dVery low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
eMost trials did not provide details of random sequence generation, allocation concealment, and blinding of data analysts or assessors (see Multimedia Appendix 5).
fThe optimal information size criterion was not met by the meta-analysis (power <80%).
gSerious unexplained inconsistency/heterogeneity (I2>70%). Point estimates and confidence intervals between RCTs varied considerably in magnitude and direction.
h95% credible intervals (Bayesian meta-analysis).
Summary of findings from the meta-analyses with the most direct evidence in each group for the outcome of HF-related hospitalizations.
| Outcome: Comparison | Number of participants (studies) | Quality of evidence | Relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effects | ||
| Risk with comparator | Risk difference with HT (95% CI) | |||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Stable and recently discharged patients | 1570 (4 studies) | MODERATE due to risk of biase | RR 0.79 (0.67 to 0.94) | 285 per 1000 | 60 fewer per 1000 (from 17 fewer to 94 fewer) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours or 24/7, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Recently discharged patients (≤28 days) | 755 (2 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias and imprecisione,f | HR 0.86 (0.61 to 1.21)g | 315 per 1000 | 37 fewer per 1000 (from 109 fewer to 52 more) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
|
| ||||||
|
| Population: Patients with stable heart failure | 432 (2 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias and imprecisione,f | HR 0.70 (0.34 to 1.5)g | 221 per 1000 | 61 fewer per 1000 (from 139 fewer to 91 more) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided during office hours, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
|
| ||||||
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| Population: Patients with stable heart failure | 1170 (3 studies) | LOW due to risk of bias and imprecisione,f | HR 0.64 (0.34 to 1.14)g | 251 per 1000 | 82 fewer per 1000 (from 157 fewer to 30 more) |
| Intervention: Home telemonitoring with clinical support provided 24/7, without home visits for clinical assessment or educational purposes | ||||||
| Comparator group: usual care | ||||||
aHigh quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
bModerate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
cLow quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
dVery low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
eMost trials did not provide details of random sequence generation, allocation concealment, and blinding of data analysts or assessors (see Multimedia Appendix 5).
fThe optimal information size criterion was not met by the meta-analysis (power <80%).
g95% credible intervals (Bayesian meta-analysis).
Figure 2Citation matrix of previously published RCTs included in the 15 systematic reviews (all references are available in Multimedia Appendix 3).
Figure 3Citation matrix of previously published observational studies included in the 15 systematic reviews (all references are available in Multimedia Appendix 3).
Effects of HT according to the type of technology used.
| Types of HT technologies | All-cause mortality | All-cause hospitalizations | HF hospitalizations |
| Automated device-based telemonitoring (TM & TM+) | RR 0.65 [0.54-0.79], | RR 0.89 [0.76-1.05], | RR 0.77 [0.64-0.91], |
| Telemonitoring of vital signs (TM) | RR 0.64 [0.51-0.80], | RR 0.81 [0.64-1.03], | RR 0.73 [0.58-0.91], |
| Telemonitoring of vital signs and symptoms (TM+) | RR 0.70 [0.47-1.04], | RR 1.04 [0.90-1.21], | RR 0.87 [0.66-1.13], |
| Mobile telemonitoring (MT) | RR 0.67 [0.35-1.26], | RR 0.99 [0.76-1.29], | RR 0.72 [0.42-1.26], |
| Interactive voice response (IVR) | RR 1.09 [0.57-2.07], | RR 1.18 [0.87-1.60], | RR 1.03 [0.65-1.61], |
| Video-consultation with vital signs monitoring (VC+) | RR 0.95 [0.35-2.53], | RR 1.06 [0.97-1.16], | No studies available |
| All types of HT combined (TM, TM+, MT, IVR, VC+ | RR 0.73 [0.62-0.85], | RR 0.95 [0.85-1.06], | RR 0.79 [0.69-0.91], |
aMeta-analysis could not be performed. Only 1 RCT provided data.