Personalized Intervention Strategy Based on a Risk Score Generated From Subcutaneous Insertable Cardiac Monitor: Results From Phase 1 of ALLEVIATE-HF.

heart failure protocolized intervention pathway remote monitoring risk metric

Journal

Journal of the American Heart Association
ISSN: 2047-9980
Titre abrégé: J Am Heart Assoc
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101580524

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
11 Oct 2024
Historique:
medline: 11 10 2024
pubmed: 11 10 2024
entrez: 11 10 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Diagnostic variables from insertable cardiac monitors may be useful in identifying patients at increased risk of heart failure (HF) events. High-risk alerts must be coupled with interventions to improve outcomes. We aim to assess the safety of a predefined protocolized intervention pathway activated by insertable cardiac monitor high-risk alerts. ALLEVIATE-HF (Algorithm Using LINQ Sensors for Evaluation and Treatment of Heart Failure) Phase 1 was a randomized interventional study enrolling patients with New York Heart Association class II/III and a recent HF event. A HF risk score based on insertable cardiac monitor diagnostics, including impedance, respiration rate, atrial fibrillation burden, heart rate during atrial fibrillation, heart rate variability, and activity duration, was calculated. A protocolized intervention pathway was activated when high-risk scores were detected that involved physician-prescribed nurse-implemented uptitration of diuretic for 4 days, unless safety rule-out conditions were met. Interventions could be repeated if high-risk scores persisted and did not require worsening symptoms. In total, 59 patients were randomized (mean age 68.2±11.8 years; 59.3% male); 67.8% with ejection fraction ≥50%. The mean follow-up was 11.8±8.1 months. Overall, 146 high-risk scores were recorded in 33 patients and 118 interventions occurred in 75 (51.4%) high-risk alerts that did not meet safety rule-out criteria. There were no serious adverse events and 13 adverse events related to interventions. In patients with symptoms at intervention initiation, symptoms resolved in 37 interventions (80%) and worsened in 8 (17%). In asymptomatic patients, symptoms developed in 3 interventions (7%). A personalized medication intervention based on insertable cardiac monitor risk score can be safely instituted in patients with HF, irrespective of symptoms. URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique Identifier: NCT04452149.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Diagnostic variables from insertable cardiac monitors may be useful in identifying patients at increased risk of heart failure (HF) events. High-risk alerts must be coupled with interventions to improve outcomes. We aim to assess the safety of a predefined protocolized intervention pathway activated by insertable cardiac monitor high-risk alerts.
METHODS AND RESULTS RESULTS
ALLEVIATE-HF (Algorithm Using LINQ Sensors for Evaluation and Treatment of Heart Failure) Phase 1 was a randomized interventional study enrolling patients with New York Heart Association class II/III and a recent HF event. A HF risk score based on insertable cardiac monitor diagnostics, including impedance, respiration rate, atrial fibrillation burden, heart rate during atrial fibrillation, heart rate variability, and activity duration, was calculated. A protocolized intervention pathway was activated when high-risk scores were detected that involved physician-prescribed nurse-implemented uptitration of diuretic for 4 days, unless safety rule-out conditions were met. Interventions could be repeated if high-risk scores persisted and did not require worsening symptoms. In total, 59 patients were randomized (mean age 68.2±11.8 years; 59.3% male); 67.8% with ejection fraction ≥50%. The mean follow-up was 11.8±8.1 months. Overall, 146 high-risk scores were recorded in 33 patients and 118 interventions occurred in 75 (51.4%) high-risk alerts that did not meet safety rule-out criteria. There were no serious adverse events and 13 adverse events related to interventions. In patients with symptoms at intervention initiation, symptoms resolved in 37 interventions (80%) and worsened in 8 (17%). In asymptomatic patients, symptoms developed in 3 interventions (7%).
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
A personalized medication intervention based on insertable cardiac monitor risk score can be safely instituted in patients with HF, irrespective of symptoms.
REGISTRATION BACKGROUND
URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique Identifier: NCT04452149.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39392161
doi: 10.1161/JAHA.124.035501
doi:

Banques de données

ClinicalTrials.gov
['NCT04452149']

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

e035501

Auteurs

Rami Kahwash (R)

The Ohio State University Columbus OH USA.

Michael R Zile (MR)

Medical University of South Carolina Charleston SC USA.
Ralph H. Johnson Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System Charleston SC USA.

Prasad Chalasani (P)

Florida Heart Center Fort Pierce FL USA.

Barry Bertolet (B)

Cardiology Associates Research LLC North Mississippi Medical Center Tupelo MS USA.

Laura Gravelin (L)

Mount Carmel Health System Columbus OH USA.

Muhammad Shahzeb Khan (MS)

Duke University Medical Center Durham NC USA.

Jennifer Wehking (J)

Medtronic Mounds View MN USA.

Brian Van Dorn (B)

Medtronic Mounds View MN USA.

Verla Laager (V)

Medtronic Mounds View MN USA.

Bart Gerritse (B)

Medtronic Bakken Research Center Maastricht Netherlands.

Aimee Laechelt (A)

Medtronic Mounds View MN USA.

Javed Butler (J)

Baylor Scott and White Research Institute Dallas TX USA.
University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson MS USA.

Classifications MeSH