| Literature DB >> 30536146 |
C G M J Eurlings1, J J Boyne1, R A de Boer2, H P Brunner-La Rocca3.
Abstract
Telemedicine in chronic diseases like heart failure is rapidly evolving and has two important goals: improving and individualising care as well as reducing costs. In this paper, we provide a critical and an updated review of the current evidence by discussing the most important trials, meta-analyses and systematic reviews. So far, evidence for the CardioMEMS device is most convincing. Other trials regarding invasive and non-invasive telemonitoring and telephone support show divergent results, but several meta-analyses and systematic reviews uniformly reported a beneficial effect. Voice-over systems and ECG monitoring had neutral results. Lack of direct comparison between different modalities makes it impossible to determine the most effective method. Dutch studies showed predominantly non-significant results, mainly due to underpowered studies or because of a high standard of usual care. There are no conclusive results on cost-effectiveness of telemedicine because of the above shortcomings. The adherence of elderly patients was good in the trials, being essential for the compliance of telemedicine in the entire heart failure population. In the future perspective, telemedicine should be better standardised and evolve to be more than an addition to standard care to improve care and reduce costs.Entities:
Keywords: Heart failure; Telemedicine; ehealth and telehealth
Year: 2019 PMID: 30536146 PMCID: PMC6311157 DOI: 10.1007/s12471-018-1202-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neth Heart J ISSN: 1568-5888 Impact factor: 2.380
Fig. 1CardioMEMS, implantable haemodynamic monitoring system. a CardioMEMS sensor or transmitter. b Transcatheter is implanted into a distal branch of the descending pulmonary artery. c The patient is instructed to take daily pressure readings from home using the home electronics. d Information transmitted from the monitoring system to the database is immediately available to the investigators for review. e Transmitted information consists of pressure trend information and individual pulmonary artery pressure waveforms. With permission from Elsevier, original figure from Abraham et al. Lancet. 2011;377:658–66
Fig. 2Examples of invasive monitoring. a OptiVOL of Medtronic pacemaker/ICD devices. b Results presented for OptiVol with the thoracic impedance (ohms) measured and the OptiVol fluid index, resulting from the difference of measured thoracic impedance and reference thoracic impedance, with threshold. As the patient’s lungs become congested, intrathoracic impedance tends to decrease. Similarly, an increase in intrathoracic impedance may indicate the patient’s lungs are becoming more dry. c The Chronicle® Implantable Hemodynamic Monitor. d Results of Right Ventricle (RV) Systolic Pressure measurements of a sensor on a transvenous lead positioned in the right ventricle and estimated pulmonary artery diastolic (ePAD) pressures. With permission, original figure A/B/C from source: Medtronic Inc. With permission from Elsevier, original figure D from Bourge et al. Am Coll Cardiol. 2008;51:1073–9
Summaries of different international telemedicine studies
| Study | Design |
| FU in months | Intervention | Primary endpoint | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TELE-HF (2010) | RCT | 1,653 | 6 | TM: | readmission for any reason or death | negative |
| 2 arms: | telephone based interactive voice-response system. Symptoms and weight daily collected | (difference 0.8% points; 95% CI −4.0–5.6; | ||||
| TM vs. UC | ||||||
| WISH (2010) | RCT | 344 | 12 | intervention group: | cardiac rehospitalisation | negative |
| 2 arms: | electronic scale automatically transmitted weight | (HR 0.90; 95% CI 0.19–1.73; | ||||
| TM vs. UC | ||||||
| CHAMPION (2011) | prospective single blind multicentre trial | 550 | 15 | CardioMEMS: wireless implantable haemodynamic monitoring system of pulmonary artery pressures in addition of standard care | HF related hospitalisations | positive |
| (HR 0.72; 95% CI 0.60–0.85; | ||||||
| 2 arms: | ||||||
| intervention vs. UC | ||||||
| no device/system-related complications | positive | |||||
| (98.6%; 95% CI 99.3–100.0) | ||||||
| no pressure-sensor failure | positive | |||||
| (100%; 95% CI 99.3–100.0) | ||||||
| TIM-HF (2011) | RCT | 710 | 26 | TM: Including daily ECG, blood | mortality | negative |
| 2 arms: | pressure, body weight | (HR 0.97; 95% CI 0.67–1.41; | ||||
| TM + MTS vs. UC | ||||||
| INH (2012) | open RCT | 715 | 6 | HF nurse: | combined: time to death or rehospitalisation | negative |
| in hospital contact; teaching materials; UTS; blood pressure/heart rate; up-titrating medication (in cooperation with GPs); weekly contact first, later individualised | ||||||
| 2 arms: | (HR 1.02; 95% CI 0.81–1.30; | |||||
| NTS + UC vs. UC | ||||||
| CHAT (2013) | RCT | 405 | 12 | TeleWatch system | composite of death; HF hospitalisation; withdrawal from study due to worsening HF and improvement of well-being | negative |
| 2 arms: | follow-up by HF nurses at least monthly regarding: | (OR = 1.02; | ||||
| UC vs. UC + NTS | ||||||
| IN-TIME (2014) | RCT | 664 | 12 | TM by ICD: | composite of all-cause death; overnight HF hospital admission; change in NYHA class and change patient self-assessment | positive |
| 2 arms: | Tachyarrhythmia; low % biv-pacing; increase VES; decreased patient activity; abnormal intracardiac electrogram | (OR 0.63; 95% CI 0.43–0.90) | ||||
| UC + TM vs. UC | ||||||
| MCCD (2014) | RCT | 204 | 26 | remote monitoring of: | 30-day readmission for the first year | positive |
| 2 arms: | daily weight; blood pressure; heart rate; heart rhythm | |||||
| TM vs. UC | ||||||
| all-cause hospitalisation; Average time to hospitalisation; Costs; Mortality and QoL | negative | |||||
| EFFECT (2015) | prospective, non-randomised trial | 987 | 12 | TM by CIED: | combined: all-cause mortality and CV hospitalisations | positive |
| study protocol did not mandate any specific device programming and was free to enable the available system integrity and clinical alerts for automatic remote notification | (0.15 vs. 0.27 events/year; incident rate ratio, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.41–0.73; | |||||
| 2 arms: | ||||||
| UC vs. TM + UC | ||||||
| OptiLink HF (2016) | RCT | 1,002 | 22–23 | TM by CIED: | composite of all-cause death and CV hospitalisation | negative |
| 2 arms: | fluid status alerts; automatically transmitted as inaudible text message to the responsible physician | (HR 0.87; 95% CI 0.62–1.28; | ||||
| UC vs. TM + UC | ||||||
| COMMIT-HF (2017) | observational prospective cohort study | 822 | 36 | TM by CIED: | all-cause mortality | positive |
| automatic transmission of data from the cardiac device. Daily check of the data by 2 physicians and 2 EP nurses | ||||||
| (HR 0.187; 95% CI 0.075–0.467, | ||||||
| 2 arms: | ||||||
| US vs. TM + UC | ||||||
| TIM-HF2 (2018) | RCT | 1,571 | Max 13 | daily transmission of: bodyweight; blood pressure; heart rate; heart rhythm; SpO2; Self-rated health status | percentage of days lost due CV hospitalisations or all-cause death | positive |
| 2 arms: | (ratio 0.80; 95% CI 0.65–1.00; | |||||
| UC vs. UC + RPM |
N number of participants, FU follow-upm RCT randomised controlled trial, TM telemonitoring; UC usual care; NTS nursing telephone support; MTS medical telephone support; RPM remote patient management; CIED cardiac implantable endovascular device, VES ventricular extrasystole, EP electrophysiology, HF heart failure, TM telemonitoring, OR odds ratio, HR hazard ratio, CI confidence interval; PA pulmonary artery, HF heart failure, CV cardiovascular; QoL Quality of Life.
Fig. 3Telemonitoring system for remote monitoring of arrhythmia and heart failure patients. Multi-parameter data acquisition and transmission should be fully automatic with smooth data flow to medical staff/arrhythmia and heart failure monitoring centre. Optimised data workflow: normal data are automatically stored in a patient’s electronic file without further detailed evaluation. Alarm threshold crossing triggers detailed data review and potential medical action. With permission from Oxford University Press, original figure from Varma N, Ricci RP. Eur Heart J. 2013;34:1885–95 and reprinted/adapted figure in Hindricks G, Varma N. Eur Heart J. 2016;37:3164–6
Summaries of different Dutch telemedicine studies
| Study | Design |
| FU in months | Intervention | Primary endpoint | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TEN-HMS study (2005) | RCT | 426 | 14–15 | TM: | TM vs. NTS: | negative |
| 3 arms: | electronic monitoring of weight; blood pressure; single lead ECG | days lost because of death or hospitalisation | (difference −4 days; CI −15–6) | |||
| UC; TM; NTS | ||||||
| NTS: (nursing telephone support) | TM, NTS vs. UC: | positive | ||||
| days lost because of death or hospitalisation | (difference 6 days; 95% CI 1–11) | |||||
| TEHAF (2010) | RCT | 382 | 12 | Health Buddy: | Time to first hospitalisation | negative |
| 2 arms: | Monitoring signs & symptoms; Education; Support of self-care | (HR 0.65; 95% CI 0.35–1.17; | ||||
| UC; TM | ||||||
| IN TOUCH (2016) | RCT | 177 | 9 | innovative ICT-guided-disease management support combined with TM | composite endpoint of mortality, HF readmission and change in health-related quality of life | negative |
| 2 arms: | (Mean difference 0.1; 95% CI −0.67–0.82; | |||||
| innovative ICT-guided support; Innovative ICT-guided support + TM | ||||||
| electronic monitoring of weight; blood pressure; ECG (used in case of start-up or up-titration of beta-blockers) | ||||||
| e-Vita (2018) | RCT | 450 | 12 | heart Failure Matters website | self-care | negative |
| 3 arms: | care pathway on e‑vita platform | HFM vs. UC mean 72.1 vs. 72.7, and EACP vs. UC 76.1 vs. 72.7, respectively (overall | ||||
| UC; UC + HFM website; care pathway + link to HFM website | ||||||
| Hart Motief Study (2015) | pre-post design | 102 | 12 | Motiva telehealth system: providing educational material, reminders of medication and motivational messages | no. of HF-hospitalisations | positive |
| (rate ratio 4.1; 95% CI 2.8–6.3; |
N number of participants, FU follow-up, RCT randomised controlled trial, TM telemonitoring, UC usual care, NTS nursing telephone support, MTS medical telephone support, CIED cardiac implantable endovascular device, HF heart failure, TM telemonitoring. OR odds ratio, HR hazard ratio, CI confidence interval, PA pulmonary artery, HF heart failure, CV cardiovascular´, QoL quality of life