Dr. Bauman sits at one end of the spectrum: “If it looks like a patient has heart failure, I refer them right away; I don’t wait for decompensation to occur. I want to be sure that there are no nuances in the patient that need something before I recognize it. Most of my PCP partners do the same. You don’t know what it is you don’t know. For me, it’s better to refer the patient right away so the patient has a cardiologist who already knows them who can be called if they start to decompensate.”
Dr. Bauman cited the increasing complexity of heart failure management as the main driver of her current approach, which she contrasted to how she dealt with heart failure patients 20 years ago. “It’s become so complicated that, as a PCP, I don’t feel that I can keep up” with the optimal ways to manage every heart failure patient. “I might not give my heart failure patients the best care they could receive.” The aspects of care that Dr. Bauman said she can provide to heart failure patients she has referred include “dealing with lifestyle changes, making sure patients are taking their medications and getting to their appointments, adjusting their heart-failure medication dosages as needed once they start on the drugs, and seeing that their diabetes and hypertension are well controlled. That is the role of the PCP. But when it comes to deciding which HF medications to use, that’s when I like to have a cardiologist involved.”
But the PCPs at Mayo Clinic often take a different tack, said Dr. McKie. “If the patient is a simple case of heart failure with no red flags and the patient is doing relatively well on treatment with simple diuretic treatment, then initiation of heart failure medications and ongoing management is often directed by the PCP with some cardiology backup as needed,” he said. But Dr. McKie conceded that a spectrum of PCP approaches exists at Mayo as well. “A lot depends on the patient and on the specific provider. Some patients we never get calls about; their PCPs are excellent at managing diuretics and uptitrating beta-blockers and ACE inhibitors. We may only get called if the patient decompensates, But other PCPs are very uncomfortable and they request that we get involved as soon as the diagnosis of stage C heart failure is made. So there is a wide range.” Dr. McKie noted that he thinks it is appropriate for himself or one of his cardiology colleagues to get more active when the HFrEF patient’s ejection fraction drops below 40% and certainly below 35%. That’s because at this stage, patients also need treatment with an aldosterone receptor antagonist such as spironolactone, and they undergo consideration for receiving an implantable cardioverter defibrillator or a cardiac resynchronization therapy device.
“There is nothing magic about heart failure management; it is very well proscribed by guidelines. Nothing precludes a PCP from taking ownership” of heart failure patients, said Dr. Akshay S. Desai, a heart failure cardiologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “I think there is some fear among PCPs that they intrude” by managing heart failure patients. But for patients with structural heart disease or even left ventricular dysfunction, “PCPs should feel empowered to start standard heart failure treatments, including ACE inhibitors and beta-blockers, especially because half of heart failure patients have HFpEF, and PCPs often don’t refer HFpEF patients to cardiologists. It’s the patients with left ventricular dysfunction who end up in heart failure clinics,” Dr. Desai said.
On the other hand, Dr. Desai cautioned PCPs against waiting too long to bring more complex, sicker, and harder-to-manage patients to the attention of a heart failure specialist.
“What we worry about are late referrals, when patients are profoundly decompensated,” he said. “By the time they show up [at a heart failure clinic or emergency department] they have end-organ dysfunction,” which makes them much harder to treat and maybe irreversible. “Recognizing heart failure early is the key, and early referral is an obligation” when a heart failure patient is deteriorating or becomes too complex for a PCP to properly manage, Dr. Desai advised.
But even when heart failure patients develop more severe disease, with significantly depressed left ventricular function or frequent decompensations, PCPs continue to play a valuable role in coordinating the wide range of treatments patients need for their various comorbidities.
“Once a cardiologist or heart failure physician is involved there is still a role for PCPs” said Dr. Monica R. Shah, deputy chief of the Heart Failure and Arrhythmia Branch of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in Bethesda, Md. “Heart failure patients are complex, it’s not just one organ system that’s affected, and you need a partnership between cardiologists and PCPs to coordinate all of a patient’s care. A heart failure physician needs to work with a PCP to be sure that the patient’s health is optimal. Collaboration between cardiologists and PCPs is key to ensure that optimal care is effectively delivered to patients,” Dr. Shah said in an interview.