| Literature DB >> 31832118 |
Matthew Barrett1, Josiane Boyne2, Julia Brandts3, Hans-Peter Brunner-La Rocca2, Lieven De Maesschalck4, Kurt De Wit4, Lana Dixon5, Casper Eurlings2, Donna Fitzsimons6, Olga Golubnitschaja7, Arjan Hageman8, Frank Heemskerk9, André Hintzen2, Thomas M Helms10, Loreena Hill6, Thom Hoedemakers8, Nikolaus Marx3, Kenneth McDonald1, Marc Mertens4, Dirk Müller-Wieland3, Alexander Palant10, Jens Piesk11, Andrew Pomazanskyi11, Jan Ramaekers8, Peter Ruff12, Katharina Schütt3, Yash Shekhawat11, Chantal F Ski6, David R Thompson6, Andrew Tsirkin12, Kay van der Mierden8, Chris Watson6, Bettina Zippel-Schultz10.
Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is one of the most complex chronic disorders with high prevalence, mainly due to the ageing population and better treatment of underlying diseases. Prevalence will continue to rise and is estimated to reach 3% of the population in Western countries by 2025. It is the most important cause of hospitalisation in subjects aged 65 years or more, resulting in high costs and major social impact. The current "one-size-fits-all" approach in the treatment of HF does not result in best outcome for all patients. These facts are an imminent threat to good quality management of patients with HF. An unorthodox approach from a new vision on care is required. We propose a novel predictive, preventive and personalised medicine approach where patients are truly leading their management, supported by an easily accessible online application that takes advantage of artificial intelligence. This strategy paper describes the needs in HF care, the needed paradigm shift and the elements that are required to achieve this shift. Through the inspiring collaboration of clinical and high-tech partners from North-West Europe combining state of the art HF care, artificial intelligence, serious gaming and patient coaching, a virtual doctor is being created. The results are expected to advance and personalise self-care, where standard care tasks are performed by the patients themselves, in principle without involvement of healthcare professionals, the latter being able to focus on complex conditions. This new vision on care will significantly reduce costs per patient while improving outcomes to enable long-term sustainability of top-level HF care.Entities:
Keywords: Artificial Intelligence; Comorbidities; Diabetes; Disease modelling; Healthcare digitalisation; Healthcare economy; Heart failure; Individualised patient profile; Information and communications technology; Integrated care; Medical ethics; Multi-level diagnostics; Patient engagement; Patient stratification; Predictive preventive personalised participatory medicine; Professional interactome; Societal impact; Therapy monitoring
Year: 2019 PMID: 31832118 PMCID: PMC6882991 DOI: 10.1007/s13167-019-00188-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EPMA J ISSN: 1878-5077 Impact factor: 6.543
Fig. 1Important elements of patient needs in chronic diseases such as HF. They include different elements of adequate information, optimal medical care, single personalised treatment plan, access to care, adequate information, sufficient support and sufficiently considering patient well-being to enable self-care supported by eHealth including artificial intelligence
Fig. 2Picker’s principles of patient centred care, highlighting the most important elements of care to achieve high-quality healthcare with high patients’ satisfaction. These principles are important to integrate in the envisioned paradigm shift
Fig. 3Novel hybrid concept for the paradigm change in chronic heart failure treatment including artificial intelligence (AI) supported self-care and targeted involvement of medical caregivers, requiring adequate multi-level diagnostics at patient side and comprehensive individual datasets. Depending on complexity, treatment decisions are being made by AI directly to the patients or by healthcare professionals (caregivers)