Patient reported experience and adherence to remote patient management in chronic heart failure patients: a posthoc analysis of the TIM-HF2 trial

European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

5 September 2022
Organised by: Logo
ESC Journals HEART FAILURE Chronic Heart Failure

Abstract

AbstractAims

Remote patient management (RPM) enables early detection and prevention of deterioration in heart failure (HF) patients by measuring vital parameters. The analysis objective is to assess patient reported experience with RPM, adherence to daily measurements, and outline affecting factors both.

Methods and results

Telemedical interventional management in-HF2 was conducted in 2013–18 with 1 538 HF patients with a 12-month follow-up. Under guidance of HF nurses, patients had to measure daily weight, blood pressure, electrocardiogram, and self-rated health status. At the end of the study, patients received a programme survey to analyse patient perceptions and satisfaction with telemedicine care and study organization. Adherence was distinguished between measurement of at least one [incomplete adherence (IA)] and all vital parameters [complete adherence (CA)] and defined as ratio of the number of days of measurements taken divided by the number of days of possible measurements. All data and group differences were analysed descriptively (mean ± SD) and by analysis of variance and t-test. Survey response rate was 79.7%. Patients were satisfied with the programme and device usability. CA was 89.1 ± 14.1%, consistently high over the study course and independent of severity of disease (left ventricular ejection fraction, N terminals pro brain natriuretic peptide, New York Heart Association). Lower IA was found with patients <70 years and prior to unplanned cardiovascular (CV) hospitalizations (difference by −5.2 ± 20.5%) and after unplanned CV hospitalizations compared with the entire study period (lower by −12.8 ± 24.7%). Patients from rural areas were found to have higher CA than patients from urban regions.

Conclusions

With user-friendly devices, pre-interventional patient training, regular patient contact and close cooperation between primary physicians and telemedical centre, a long-lasting high adherence and satisfaction could be achieved. A change in adherence might detect health deterioration and indicate the need to intensify RPM.

Registration

ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01878630) and Deutsches Register Klinischer Studien (DRKS00010239).

Contributors

Sandra Prescher
Sandra Prescher

Author

Charite University Hospital Berlin , Germany

Meike Hiddemann
Meike Hiddemann

Author

Charité - University Medicine Berlin Berlin , Germany

Oliver Deckwart
Oliver Deckwart

Author

University Hospital Leipzig Leipzig , Germany