Non-invasive telemonitoring devices and structured telephone support show potential to reduce all-cause mortality and heart failure hospitalizations, although results across individual trials remain mixed.
Heart failure
Non-invasive telemonitoring devices vs Standard care
Heart failure (HF) patients represent one of the most prevalent as well as one of the most fragile population encountered in the cardiology and internal medicine departments nowadays. Estimated to account for around 26 million people worldwide, diagnosed patients present a poor prognosis and quality of life with a clinical history accompanied by repeated hospital admissions caused by an exacerbation of their chronic condition. The frequent hospitalizations and the extended hospital stays mean an extremely high economic burden for healthcare institutions. Meanwhile, the number of chronically diseased and elderly patients is continuously rising, and a lack of specialized physicians is evident. To cope with this health emergency, more efficient strategies for patient management, more accurate diagnostic tools, and more efficient preventive plans are needed. In recent years, telemonitoring has been introduced as the potential answer to solve such needs. Different methodologies and devices have been progressively investigated for effective home monitoring of cardiologic patients. Invasive hemodynamic devices, such as CardioMEMS™, have been demonstrated to be reducing hospitalizations and mortality, but their use is however restricted to limited cases. The role of external non-invasive devices for remote patient monitoring, instead, is yet to be clarified. In this review, we summarized the most relevant studies and devices that, by utilizing non-invasive telemonitoring, demonstrated whether beneficial effects in the management of HF patients were effective.
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Alessandro Faragli
Deutsches Herzzentrum der Charité
Dawud Abawi
German Centre for Cardiovascular Research
Caroline Quinn
College of the Holy Cross
Heart Failure Reviews
Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
German Centre for Cardiovascular Research
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Faragli et al. (Mon,) conducted a review in Heart failure. Non-invasive telemonitoring devices vs. Standard care was evaluated. Non-invasive telemonitoring devices and structured telephone support show potential to reduce all-cause mortality and heart failure hospitalizations, although results across individual trials remain mixed.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a16331ff9339c53aa8e994b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10741-020-09963-7
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