Abstract
The aim of our research was to evaluate mortality and rehospitalizations rates in patients with high risk subtype of heart failure (advanced HF) during 12 months of intensive monitoring after discharge on the basis of guidelines recommendations and personalized approach in treatment with frequent outpatient monitoring to reveal subcompensation/worsening of HF.
Methods
High risk advanced subtype of systolic HF was determined based on at least two hospitalizations during last year, severely reduced EF<30%, right and left atria hypertension echo patterns, pseudonormal/restrictive diastolic dysfunction, frequent outpatient deterioration of euvolemic state.
Patients were randomized into two groups: 143 patients who underwent personalized intensive outpatient monitoring with care and 71 patients who underwent standard monitoring with regular guideline based treatment
Intensive monitoring in ambulatory settings included frequent attending protocol of clinical evaluation (from OPTIMIZE -HF multicenter study), body mass, heart rate, GFR controls and additional echo evaluation of pressures in right and left atria at every outpatient visit, lung ultrasound with detection of B-lines.
Results
Cumulative number of CV and HF deaths was 11% (16 out of 143 in intensive monitoring group) and 36% (26 out of 71 patients) in standard monitoring group.
Kaplan-Meier curve showed survival benefit in patients with personalized monitoring and treatment compared to those who were on standard care (Picture 1).
Conclusions
A strong trend towards decline in mortality and rehospitalizations, when personalized outpatient monitoring was implemented was observed (P<0,001) at 12 months in patients with advanced systolic heart failure.
Kaplan-Meier survival curves groups
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding source: None