| Literature DB >> 32326818 |
Brian R Lindman1, Suzanne V Arnold2, Rodrigo Bagur3, Lindsay Clarke4, Megan Coylewright5, Frank Evans6, Judy Hung7, Sandra B Lauck8, Susan Peschin4, Vandana Sachdev6, Lisa M Tate9, Jason H Wasfy7, Catherine M Otto10.
Abstract
Over the past decade, the field of valvular heart disease (VHD) has rapidly transformed, largely as a result of the development and improvement of less invasive transcatheter approaches to valve repair or replacement. This transformation has been supported by numerous well-designed randomized trials, but they have centered almost entirely on devices and procedures. Outside this scope of focus, however, myriad aspects of therapy and management for patients with VHD have either no guidelines or recommendations based only on expert opinion and observational studies. Further, research in VHD has often failed to engage patients to inform study design and identify research questions of greatest importance and relevance from a patient perspective. Accordingly, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute convened a Working Group on Patient-Centered Research in Valvular Heart Disease, composed of clinician and research experts and patient advocacy experts to identify gaps and barriers to research in VHD and identify research priorities. While recognizing that important research remains to be done to test the safety and efficacy of devices and procedures to treat VHD, we intentionally focused less attention on these areas of research as they are more commonly pursued and supported by industry. Herein, we present the patient-centered research gaps, barriers, and priorities in VHD and organized our report according to the "patient journey," including access to care, screening and diagnosis, preprocedure therapy and management, decision making when a procedure is contemplated (clinician and patient perspectives), and postprocedure therapy and management. It is hoped that this report will foster collaboration among diverse stakeholders and highlight for funding bodies the pressing patient-centered research gaps, opportunities, and priorities in VHD in order to produce impactful patient-centered research that will inform and improve patient-centered policy and care.Entities:
Keywords: aortic valve; heart valve; heart valve surgery; mitral valve; patient‐centered care; shared decision making; transcatheter valve implantation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32326818 PMCID: PMC7428554 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.119.015975
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501
Figure 1Context for patient‐centered research in valvular heart disease (VHD)—the patient journey.
This figure outlines the patient journey and puts the sections of our report in context of this journey.
Access to Care—Patient‐Centered Research Questions in VHD
| Disparities in care delivery
What factors underlie disparities in care delivery (eg, echocardiographic surveillance according to guidelines and performance of valve repair/replacement at the appropriate time) for women, minorities, low‐income, and rural patients? How can those factors best be addressed and corrected? How do referral rates differ among various subgroups and why? Why is there a higher refusal rate for valve intervention among blacks? What alert systems (eg, echo parameter alert) would promote equitable, timely identification, and appropriate monitoring and treatment of VHD? How are Medicare coverage and reimbursement policies impacting access to available valve interventions, in general and among subgroups? Do current health insurance systems limit access? |
| Telemedicine
How might telemedicine be employed to address challenges in the diagnosis and delivery of care for patients with significant VHD? |
| Heart valve centers
What are the pros and cons, benefits, and costs of having valve care delivered via heart valve centers (concentrated expertise and procedures) vs a more disseminated model? Do heart valve centers have better clinical outcomes after adjustment for risk? How do patients weigh differences in outcomes between centers and the burden of travel to centers further from home? How aware are patients of the options available to them regarding where to receive care? |
VHD indicates valvular heart disease.
Screening and Diagnosis—Patient‐Centered Research Questions in VHD
| Risk factors for VHD
What risk factors are associated with the development of each type of valve disease and how could knowledge of these factors inform screening and prevention efforts? |
| Tools to screen for VHD
What is the effectiveness of potential tools to screen for VHD? Examples include patient questionnaires, cardiac auscultation, serum biomarkers, point‐of‐care cardiac ultrasound, machine learning image analysis, and standard echocardiography How often should testing be repeated for patients with and without a prior diagnosis of VHD? |
| Scope of screening for VHD
What are the pros and cons, benefits, and costs of screening efforts focused on specific patient groups or broadly applied to entire populations? If screening efforts are focused, which prescreening or enrichment criteria for patients “at risk” are best? |
| Integrated screening for VHD
Which combination of screening tools and approaches will identify the most patients with significant valve disease for the least costs/resources? Which approaches will ensure appropriate and consistent screening of all patients without bias related to age, sex, ethnicity, finances, and insurance? |
| Consequences of screening for VHD
What are the consequences of improved screening for VHD in terms of costs, patient anxiety/well‐being/satisfaction, procedural volumes, survival, and quality of life? |
| Accurate diagnosis of significant VHD
How can adjunctive imaging tools (eg, cardiac magnetic resonance or computed tomography), circulating biomarkers, or other tools be employed to improve the accuracy of diagnosis of significant/severe VHD? |
VHD indicates valvular heart disease.
Preprocedure Therapy and Management—Patient‐Centered Research Questions in VHD
| Prevent/slow/reverse VHD with medical therapy
What factors are associated with the development and progression of VHD? What medical therapies (currently available or targeting new pathways) are effective at slowing or reversing established VHD? |
| Prevent/slow/reverse maladaptive ventricular remodeling and dysfunction with medical therapy
What factors/pathways are associated with the development and progression of maladaptive ventricular remodeling and dysfunction in the setting of pressure or volume overload? Despite potentially progressive valve disease, are there medical therapies that could prevent, slow, or reverse adverse consequences to the ventricle resulting from pressure or volume overload? If so, what is the optimal timing for those therapies to be utilized? What differences exist between the right and left ventricles with respect to pathophysiology and targets for and timing and efficacy of intervention with medical therapy? |
| “Prehabilitation” in frail patients
In patients with impaired physical function needing a valve procedure, does a rehabilitation strategy before intervention improve periprocedural and short‐term outcomes? What types of prehabilitation are feasible and which components (eg, resistance exercise, aerobic exercise, reducing sedentary behavior, and nutrition) are most important? What patient‐centered delivery strategies are best suited to optimize the impact of prehabilitation programs? |
| Blood pressure targets in patients with VHD
What are the optimal blood pressure targets in patients with VHD? Should they differ from the general population? How do age, type of valve disease, severity of valve disease, and comorbidities influence optimal targets for blood pressure? |
| Activity recommendations and restrictions in patients with VHD before a procedure
What activities and exercises promote the progression or increased risk of adverse events for specific types of VHD? What activity recommendations should be made to patients with VHD? How can this evidence be best conveyed? |
VHD indicates valvular heart disease.
Decision Making (Clinician and Patient Perspectives) When a Procedure is Contemplated—Patient‐Centered Research Questions in VHD
| Clinician Perspective |
|---|
| Optimal timing of a valve procedure
What is the optimal timing of a valve procedure for patients with asymptomatic severe valve disease or symptomatic moderate valve disease? Do cut points for “severe” valve disease need to be re‐evaluated and refined? Do recommendations for valve intervention need to more explicitly integrate the severity of the valvular lesion with the ventricular response to it? Examples include clarifying the optimal timing of valve replacement for patients with severe asymptomatic AS, moderate AS with left ventricular dysfunction or symptoms of HF, and severe asymptomatic aortic regurgitation with evidence of left ventricular dilation or subclinical dysfunction. For these patient groups, if all patients do not benefit from earlier intervention, which subgroups (as identified by imaging, biomarkers, or other factors) may benefit from earlier intervention? |
| Nonresponders to a valve procedure
What are the reasons that some patients do not experience an improvement in survival, quality of life, or functional status after a valve procedure? What are the reasons for a lack of reverse ventricular remodeling or improvement in ventricular function in some patients after a valve procedure? How can we predict who will be a nonresponder to a valve procedure and how can that inform our recommendations and SDM with the patient? Areas of particular interest include patients with significant secondary mitral regurgitation or tricuspid regurgitation. Which patients with secondary mitral regurgitation (eg, based on age, left ventricular size or function, severity of mitral regurgitation, biomarkers, and comorbidities) will benefit from a mitral procedure (eg, transcatheter valve repair or replacement or surgery) vs left ventricular assist device /transplant vs guideline‐directed medical therapy alone? Which patients with secondary tricuspid regurgitation (eg, based on right ventricular size/function, associated pulmonary vascular disease, biomarkers, and severity of tricuspid regurgitation) will benefit from a tricuspid procedure? How best can we understand patient goals and preferences and determine whether the selected therapy is likely to meet patient goals? |
| Futility of a valve procedure caused by comorbidities and frailty
Can we accurately predict when, caused by comorbidities and/or frailty, a valve procedure will not substantively improve the health status of patient even if the procedure is successful? Can current or future risk scores be efficiently and effectively utilized in practice to improve patient counseling and SDM? What role might palliative care consultation play in these scenarios in particular? |
| Clarifying the relationship between valve disease and symptoms and anticipated benefit of a procedure
When is valve disease significant enough such that treating it with a valve intervention is likely to benefit the patient? How do we determine whether symptoms are caused by valve disease or other cardiac or noncardiac comorbidities? |
| Health status assessment
Are currently HF‐specific health status measures appropriate for monitoring patients with valve disease and their response to therapy? What role might alternative or adjunctive assessments tailored to patients with valve disease have in evaluating and monitoring the well‐being of patients with valve disease longitudinally, including before and after a procedure? |
| Approach to valve procedures
Based on patient and anatomical factors, when are surgical vs transcatheter vs hybrid approaches preferred? What are the pros and cons, benefits, and risks of valve choices in various clinical settings (eg, mechanical vs bioprosthetic at a younger age and surgical vs transcatheter valve or type of transcatheter valve when a bicuspid valve is present)? What type and severity of coronary disease ought to be fixed before transcatheter valve repair or replacement and what can be deferred? For multivalve disease, when is a concomitant procedure preferred and when is a staged approach preferred? |
AS indicates aortic stenosis; HF, heart failure; SDM, shared decision making; and VHD, valvular heart disease.
Postprocedure Therapy and Management—Patient‐Centered Research Questions in VHD
| Supporting a Safe Recovery |
|---|
| Getting home safely—improving transitions of care
Which postprocedure care pathway(s) yield the best patient outcomes? Do different patient groups have different early recovery requirements? What clinician and patient factors are associated with early readmissions and what are the most effective interventions to reduce readmissions in risk‐stratified groups? How do we improve self‐care among patients discharged after a valve procedure? How should patients be monitored upon discharge after a valve procedure (including components and delivery of monitoring)? How can mobile health and technology be leveraged to optimize these processes? |
| Getting better after a heart valve procedure—rehabilitation and improving physical functioning
What factors are associated with improvement in physical function? How can frailty be treated after a heart valve procedure? What interventions (eg, aerobic exercise, resistance exercise, nutrition, medications, mindfulness, and coaching) are most effective to optimize physical function? What are the most effective, translatable, and generalizable ways to implement these interventions? How can interventions in the home and those that leverage technology and mobile health facilitate these objectives? |
| Managing complications and the long‐term sequelae of valve procedures
How should conduction disturbances and potential need for a pacemaker be monitored after transcatheter aortic valve replacement? What is the long‐term impact of conduction disturbances and pacemakers after valve procedures? How do patients report their experience of needing a new pacemaker after a valve procedure? What are the implications of leaving the inter‐atrial septum open or closing it after a left‐sided valve procedure? What are the implications for cognitive function of small particle emboli to the brain? |
HF indicates heart failure; and VHD, valvular heart disease.
Barriers to Effective Patient‐Centered Research on VHD
| Barrier | Impact |
|---|---|
| Lack of recognition of VHD as a specific area of expertise |
No specific training pathway and lack of training opportunities for VHD experts. Inadequate numbers of noninterventional VHD physician and advance practice provider experts. Inadequate focus on VHD research at scientific meetings as specified pathway. |
| Limited funding and lack of recognition of need for VHD research |
Industry funding is focused on device‐related questions, which limits innovative research on many nondevice‐related VHD research questions. Pharmaceutical companies often exclude patients with VHD from clinical trials on medical therapy and are reluctant to perform medical therapy studies that target VHD populations. VHD grant applications to the National Institutes of Health assigned to reviewers with limited expertise in VHD. |
| Lack of patient involvement in VHD research priorities, study design, and implementation |
Research fails to consider important patient‐based questions. Challenge to change the culture of research and implementation science. Reduces patient engagement in shared decision making if tool development does not include the patient perspective. |
| Lack of diversity in VHD researchers |
Lack of diversity among researchers reduces the range of research questions. Lack of diversity in VHD researchers reduces recruitment of diverse patient groups in clinical trials. |
| Lack of inclusion of patients with VHD in clinical trials of HF, hypertension, arrhythmias, and other cardiac conditions |
Medical therapies that may benefit patients with VHD have not been studied. Clinical trials of hypertension treatment in patients with VHD are not available. Effect of medical therapy on HF with preserved ejection fraction in patients with VHD has not been studied. |
| Lack of validated VHD‐specific patient‐reported outcome measures |
Patient‐reported outcome measures developed for other cardiac conditions may not capture all aspects of VHD or the diversity of patient perspectives. |
| Few measures of effectiveness of approaches to improving outcomes in patients with VHD |
Standardized measures of effectiveness would allow more rigorous research on approaches to shared decision making, heart team approaches, and heart valve centers. |
| Traditional views on diagnosis and treatment of VHD |
Reluctance to consider that screening with a stethoscope by primary providers might not be the optimal approach to screening for VHD. Reluctance to treat patients with VHD with medications known to be effective for hypertension and HF. |
| Healthcare system inertia in the approach to provision of care to patients with VHD |
Lack of implementation science studies of pathways of care to improve outcomes in patients with VHD. |
| Silos based on type of physician and type of medical center |
Particularly in settings without integration of transcatheter therapy options, care for patients with VHD is often siloed between cardiologists (pretreatment and posttreatment care) and surgeons (procedural care). Communication and care handoffs between smaller community or rural facilities and large medical centers are often poor, leading to suboptimal care for patients with VHD. Procedure‐focused programs vs comprehensive VHD centers that provide continuity of care, access to multiple modalities of treatment, and seamless communication with primary care providers. |
| Lack of diversity in the clinical VHD workforce |
Poor recognition of barriers to care in specific populations, including poor communication, geography, and access to care. Lack of trust and engagement by patients with backgrounds different from clinicians. |
| Difficulty in publishing patient‐centered research in cardiology journals |
Educating editors about patient‐centered research, patient‐centered outcomes, and standards for qualitative research would increase acceptance by major medical journals. |
HF indicates heart failure; and VHD, valvular heart disease.
Figure 2Patient‐centered research in valvular heart disease (VHD).
This figure shows the multifaceted aspects of what we define and characterize as patient‐centered research in VHD. The patient (red) is a participant in and focus of the research. The outer ring represents some of the many research questions and knowledge gaps in the field. The most common research tools and methodologies to address those knowledge gaps are shown in the next inner circle (green). Those doing and funding the research are shown in the final inner circle (blue).