| Literature DB >> 34863912 |
Darshan H Brahmbhatt1, Heather J Ross1, Yasbanoo Moayedi2.
Abstract
While COVID-19 is still ongoing and associated with more than 5 million deaths, the scope and speed of advances over the past year in terms of scientific discovery, data dissemination, and technology have been staggering. It is not a matter of "if" but "when" we will face the next pandemic, and how we leverage technology and data management effectively to create flexible ecosystems that facilitate collaboration, equitable care, and innovation will determine its severity and scale. The aim of this review is to address emerging challenges that came to light during the pandemic in health care and innovations that enabled us to adapt and continue to care for patients. The pandemic highlighted the need for seismic shifts in care paradigms and technology with considerations related to the digital divide and health literacy for digital health interventions to reach full potential and improve health outcomes. We discuss advances in telemedicine, remote patient monitoring, and emerging wearable technologies. Despite the promise of digital health, we emphasise the importance of addressing its limitations, including interpretation challenges, accuracy of findings, and artificial intelligence-driven algorithms. We summarise the most recent recommendation of the Virtual Care Task Force to scaling virtual medical services in Canada. Finally, we propose a model for optimal implementation of health digital innovations with 5 tenets including data management, data security, digital biomarkers, useful artificial intelligence, and clinical integration.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34863912 PMCID: PMC8632798 DOI: 10.1016/j.cjca.2021.11.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Cardiol ISSN: 0828-282X Impact factor: 5.223
Noninvasive heart failure remote patient monitoring trials
| Trial (country of origin) | Study population | Intervention | Results | Explanations given for results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tele-HF (2010) | 1653 HF patients enrolled within 30 days of hospitalisation for HF decompensation | Daily telephone call to automated interactive voice response system providing information on symptoms, clinical status, and weight | No difference in readmission or death from any cause within 180 days compared with usual care | Underuse of the telemonitoring system: only 86% of patients made any calls and only 55% making 3 calls weekly at 6 months |
| TIM-HF (2011) | 710 patients in NYHA II/III with LVEF ≤ 25%, or 25%-35% with decompensation requiring intravenous diuretics in previous 24 months | Patients used portable devices for ECG, blood pressure, and body weight measurements and reported self-assessed health status sent to telemedicine monitoring centre | No reduction in mortality, CV death, or HF hospitalisation compared with usual care | Stable and well managed group of patients in usual care group: only 10% experienced a cardiac event during the 24 months of the study |
| INH (2012) | 715 patients with signs and symptoms of HF decompensation and LVEF ≤ 40% | Nurse-delivered disease management programs of education, remote monitoring through structured telephone support and medical optimisation of GDMT | No reduction in primary composite end point of death or rehospitalisation compared with usual care; significant reduction in death from any cause (secondary end point) | Early hospitalisation may have allowed better care for patients in intervention group leading to a reduction in mortality |
| WISH (2012) | 344 patients with NYHA III/IV symptoms, on diuretic and HF medication with LVEF < 50% | Daily electronic weight transmission to HF clinic vs standard scale and no automatic transmission of data; all patients advised to contact clinic if > 2 kg weight gain in 3 days | No reduction in all-cause hospitalisation or death, or composite cardiac hospitalisation or death | Despite better adherence to daily weight checking in intervention group (75% vs 32% in usual-care group), no difference, suggesting that weight alone may not be a useful monitoring metric |
| TEHAF (2012) | 382 HF patients with NYHA II-IV symptoms, previous use of diuretics, and impaired cardiac function on echocardiography | Daily preset dialogue on symptoms, knowledge, and behaviour; device collected and provided tailored patient- and disease-specific information; no vital signs measured | No significant reduction in time to first HF hospitalisation | Trial underpowered for primary outcome and well treated and rather stable population |
| CHAT (2013) | 405 patients with NYHA II-IV HF, LVEF < 40%, in rural and remote areas | At least monthly use of telephone-based automated telemedicine system which assessed clinical status and medical management of their condition, sending alerts to HF nurses | No reduction in primary end point of Packer clinical composite score; significant reduction in HF hospitalisation compared with usual care | Possible useful intervention for those in rural locations without local access to community-based multidisciplinary care |
| BEAT-HF (2016) | 1427 patients aged > 50 years discharged home after hospitalisation for HF | Coaching telephone calls and telemonitoring including blood pressure, heart rate, symptoms, and weight | No reduction in readmission for any cause | Limited efficacy in use of weight as a surrogate of HF deterioration |
| TIM-HF2 (2018) | 1571 patients in NYHA II/III, LVEF ≤ 45% (or > 45% treated with diuretic) and HF hospitalisation during previous 12 months | Web-based daily remote monitoring of weight, blood pressure, pulse, ECG, peripheral capillary oxygen saturation, and self-reported health status | Reduction in the weighted average of % of days lost due to unplanned CV hospital admissions or death: HR 0.80, 95% CI 0.65-1.00 | Very high usage rate among participants: 97% of patients were 70% compliant with daily data transfer |
BEAT-HF, Better Effectiveness After Transition-Heart Failure; BP, blood pressure; CHAT, Chronic Heart Failure Assessment by Telephone; CI, confidence interval; CV, cardiovascular; ECG, electrocardiography; GDMT, guideline-directed medical therapy; HF, heart failure; HR, hazard ratio; INH, Interdisciplinary Network for Heart Failure; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; NYHA, New York Heart Association functional class; TEHAF, Telemonitoring in Patients With Heart Failure; Tele-HF, Telemonitoring to Improve Heart Failure Outcomes; TIM-HF, Telemedical Interventional Monitoring in Heart Failure; TIM-HF2, Telemedical Interventional Monitoring in Heart Failure; WISH, Weight Monitoring in Patients with Severe Heart Failure.
Engineering principles of wearable sensors,
| Engineering sensor | Sensor type | Description | Measurement | Examples of consumer wearable |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Activity | Triaxial accelerometer | Evaluates linear acceleration along 3 planes based on the principle of a seismic mass attached to a mechanical suspension system | Steps | Apple Watch SE, Series 3-6 |
| Gyroscope | Measures angular motion | |||
| GPS | Uses satellite system to identify precise orbital position | Distance | ||
| Barometer | Uses diaphragm on a vacuum chamber that compresses proportionally to pressure | Change in altitude, stair count, and detection of falls | ||
| Heart rate and rhythm | PPG | Measures the microvascular blood volume that translates into pulse waves and a tachygram recording | Arrhythmia | |
| Single-lead ECG | Contralateral finger on crown serves as negative electrode and back of the watch serves as positive electrode | Atrial fibrillation vs sinus rhythm | Apple Watch Series 4-6 | |
| Blood pressure | Oscillometry | Wrist-cuff BP | Ambulatory cuff BP monitoring | HeartGuide (Omron) |
| Fluid content | Cloth-based nanosensors | Phonocardiography, impedance cardiography, multichannel ECG, and accelerometer | Cardiac output | SimpleSENSE (Nanowear) |
BP, blood pressure; ECG, electrocardiography; EE, energy expenditure; GPS, Global Positioning System; HR, heart rate; HRR, heart rate recovery, HRV, heart rate variability; PPG, photoplethysmography; RR, respiratory rate.
Recommendations of the Virtual Care Task Force
| Develop national standards for patient health information access. |
| Support the efforts of the Federation of Medical Regulatory Authorities of Canada to simplify the registration and licensure processes for qualified physicians to provide virtual care across provincial and territorial boundaries. |
| Encourage provincial and territorial governments and provincial and territorial medical associations to develop fee schedules that are revenue neutral between in-person and virtual encounters. |
| Engage the CanMEDS consortium in incorporating and updating virtual care competencies for undergraduate, postgraduate, and continuing professional development learners. |
| Develop a standardised pan-Canadian lexicon for virtual care. |
Figure 1Model for optimal implementation of digital health innovations. AI, artificial intelligence.