| Literature DB >> 34255642 |
Cathrine Skov Schacksen1, Anne-Kirstine Dyrvig2, Nanna Celina Henneberg1, Josefine Dam Gade1, Helle Spindler3, Jens Refsgaard4, Malene Hollingdal4, Lars Dittman5, Kim Dremstrup6, Birthe Dinesen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: More than 37 million people worldwide have been diagnosed with heart failure, which is a growing burden on the health sector. Cardiac rehabilitation aims to improve patients' recovery, functional capacity, psychosocial well-being, and health-related quality of life. However, cardiac rehabilitation programs have poor compliance and adherence. Telerehabilitation may be a solution to overcome some of these challenges to cardiac rehabilitation by making it more individualized. As part of the Future Patient Telerehabilitation program, a digital toolbox aimed at enabling patients with heart failure to monitor and evaluate their own current status has been developed and tested using data from a patient-reported outcome questionnaire that the patient filled in every alternate week for 1 year.Entities:
Keywords: Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire; adherence; cardiology; cardiomyopathy; compliance; heart; heart failure; monitoring; patient-reported outcome; patients; quality of life; rehabilitation; self-reporting; telehealth; telemonitoring
Year: 2021 PMID: 34255642 PMCID: PMC8285740 DOI: 10.2196/26544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Cardio ISSN: 2561-1011
Figure 1The 3 phases of the Future Patient Telerehabilitation study. PRO: patient-reported outcome.
Figure 2A screen capture of HeartPortal. An illustration of the patient-reported outcome. Row 1: Information, My Treatment, My Status, Contacts, and Questions; Row 2: Weight, Blood Pressure, Pulse, Breathing, Sleep, Steps, and Well-being; Row 3: Time Intervals (3 months, 6 months, and Entire period); and Row 4 (bottom): Mood (light-green dot), Sleep (dark-green dot), Physical condition (orange dot), Symptom-free (red dot), Social contact (blue dot), and Mean (blue line).
Figure 3CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) diagram for the intervention group of the Future Patient Telerehabilitation trial.
Clinical and sociodemographic data of the patients enrolled in the intervention group of the Future Patient Telerehabilitation program (N=67).
| Variables | Values | |||
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| Men (n=51) | 62.18 (10.64); 35-81 | ||
| Women (n=16) | 60.31 (11.31); 43-81 | |||
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| Men and women (n=67) | 61.73 (10.75); 35-81 | ||
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| Weight (kg) | 85.34 (20.35); 56-166 | ||
| Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 124.42 (17.67); 84-172 | |||
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| Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 78.97 (10.99); 48-122 | ||
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| Heart rate (beats/minute) | 78.70 (17.76); 46-119 | ||
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| Ejection fraction (%) | 31.80 (8.49); 10-45 | ||
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| I | 10 (14.9) | ||
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| II | 42 (62.7) | ||
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| III | 13 (19.4) | ||
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| IV | 2 (2.9) | ||
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| Ischemia | 32 (47.8) | ||
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| Idiopathy | 17 (25.4) | ||
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| Hypertension | 6 (8.9) | ||
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| Valvular heart disease | 8 (11.4) | ||
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| Alcoholism | 0 (0.0) | ||
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| Postpartum heart failure | 0 (0.0) | ||
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| Chemotherapy | 0 (0.0) | ||
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| Others | 18 (26.9) | ||
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| Single or living alone | 24 (35.8) | ||
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| Married or living with a partner | 43 (64.2) | ||
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| Primary school | 4 (5.9) | ||
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| Unskilled | 16 (23.9) | ||
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| Skilled worker | 30 (44.8) | ||
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| High school | 5 (7.5) | ||
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| Bachelor’s degree | 9 (13.4) | ||
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| Master’s degree | 2 (2.9) | ||
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| Doctoral degree | 1 (0.7) | ||
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| Unemployed | 0 (0.0) | ||
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| Sick leave | 19 (28.4) | ||
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| Working for <20 hours/week | 5 (7.5) | ||
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| Working for 20-36 hours/week | 2 (2.9) | ||
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| Working full-time for 37 h/week | 9 (13.4) | ||
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| Retired | 32 (47.8) | ||
aSome patients have more causes of etiology of heart failure.
Median (IQR) scores for all patient-reported outcome measures.
| Questionnaire | Dimension | Median (IQR) score in phase 1 (n=67) | Median (IQR) score in phase 2 (n=62) | Median (IQR) score in phase 3 (n=56) | Median (IQR) score in all phases (n=56) |
| Spiegel Sleep Questionnaire | Sleep | 58.33 (12.50) | 58.33 (12.50) | 57.20 (12.50) | 58.33 (12.50) |
| Psychological well-being | Psychological well-being | 28.89 (8.89) | 28.89 (6.67) | 28.89 (6.67) | 28.89 (5.28) |
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| Physical limitations | 79.17 (31.25) | 87.50 (26.56) | 91.67 (29.17) | 88.75 (29.17) |
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| Symptom stability | 50.00 (0.00) | 50.00 (0.00) | 50.00 (0.00) | 50.00 (0.00) |
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| Symptom frequency | 79.17 (37.50) | 77.60 (35.94) | 83.33 (37.76) | 82.81 (36.98) |
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| Symptom burden | 75.00 (3.50) | 75.00 (25.00) | 83.33 (35.42) | 83.33 (31.25) |
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| Total symptom score | 76.04 (34.37) | 78.39 (30.99) | 83.33 (34.90) | 82.81 (33.20) |
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| Self-efficacy | 75.00 (25.00) | 75.00 (25.00) | 75.00 (25.00) | 75.00 (25.00) |
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| Quality of life | 66.67 (3.33) | 75.00 (35.42) | 83.33 (32.29) | 83.33 (33.33) |
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| Social limitation | 66.67 (46.88) | 80.21 (32.29) | 83.85 (33.33) | 81.25 (37.50) |
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| Overall summary score | 72.14 (32.42) | 77.34 (33.28) | 82.58 (31.48) | 79.75 (30.21) |
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| Clinical summary score | 76.04 (27.08) | 79.82 (24.90) | 86.98 (32.03) | 85.02 (30.14) |
Figure 4Changes in median scores from the 13 dimensions of the questionnaires. Dotted lines indicate a change in phase in the Future Patient Telerehabilitation program.
Results of the Friedman test of the individual dimensions during 1 year.
| Questionnaire | Dimension | Changes in score over time | |
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| Spiegel Sleep Questionnaire | Sleep quality | 0.14 (2) | .93 |
| Psychological well-being | Psychological well-being | 0.04 (2) | .98 |
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| Physical limitations | 9.25 (2) | .01a |
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| Symptom stability | 0.75 (2) | .69 |
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| Symptom frequency | 16.75 (2) | <.001a |
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| Symptom burden | 11.61 (2) | .001a |
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| Total symptom score | 17.18 (2) | <.001a |
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| Self-efficacy | 4.32 (2) | .12 |
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| Quality of life | 7.54 (2) | .02a |
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| Social limitation | 19.75 (2) | <.001a |
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| Overall summary score | 14.71 (2) | .001a |
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| Clinical summary score | 19.54 (2) | <.001a |
aStatistically significant at P<.05 (2-tailed).
z scores and significance levels from the Wilcoxon signed-rank post hoc tests when testing for differences in trends on the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire in terms of slopes between the phases.
| Dimension | Slopes | |||
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| Phase I vs phase II | Phase I vs phase III | ||
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| Physical limitations | –2.41 | .02a,b | –2.62 | .009a,b |
| Symptom frequency | –3.30 | .001a,b | –3.58 | <.001a,b |
| Symptom burden | –1.74 | .08a | –2.73 | .006a,b |
| Total symptom score | –2.77 | .006a,b | –3.30 | .001a,b |
| Quality of life | –1.69 | .09a | –3.15 | .002a,b |
| Social limitation | –2.85 | .004a,b | –3.33 | .001a,b |
| Overall summary score | –2.27 | .006a,b | –3.83 | <.001a,b |
| Clinical summary score | –3.76 | <.001a,b | –3.90 | <.001a,b |
aStatistically significant at P<.05.
bHigher slopes in phase I.