CHICAGO — Two major new clinical trials have failed to show improved outcomes for home telemonitoring of patients with heart failure, prompting a critical reappraisal of this once-promising disease management strategy.
“I think this is an important moment in our understanding of the contribution of this novel intervention in the overall management of heart failure – and I think the weight of evidence demonstrates that it is noncontributory,” Dr. Clyde W. Yancy said following presentation of the two randomized trials at the meeting.
“Evidence-based, guideline-driven therapy is the standard of care and should always be our first priority in the treatment of heart failure. The benefit of telemonitoring that has been demonstrated to be present has always been less in the few randomized controlled trials than the cohort studies, and we've allowed hyperbole and excitement to guide our judgment, rather than evidence,” added Dr. Yancy, medical director of the Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute and chief of cardiothoracic transplantation at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas.
One of the studies presented at the AHA meeting was the Telemonitoring to Improve Heart Failure Outcomes (Tele-HF) trial, a National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute–funded study involving 1,653 U.S. patients enrolled less than a month after discharge for acute decompensated heart failure.
After 6 months of daily remote telemonitoring using the commercially popular Tel-Assurance system marketed by Pharos Innovations, death and rehospitalization rates in patients using the automated telephone monitoring system were similar to those in controls receiving usual care, Dr. Sarwat I. Chaudhry of Yale University, New Haven, Conn., reported.
Similarly, the 2-year Telemedical Interventional Monitoring in Heart Failure (TIM-HF) trial, which enrolled 710 German patients with mild-to-moderate heart failure, failed to show that 24/7 access to remote telemonitoring improves all-cause mortality or heart failure hospitalization rates compared with usual care, according to Dr. Stefan D. Anker, professor of cardiology at Charite University Hospital, Berlin.
“There's no need to parse the data any further,” commented Dr. Yancy, a former AHA president. “There was no benefit seen in either of these well-designed clinical trials on outcomes that are important to patients with heart failure.”
The findings in these two definitive randomized trials underscore the limitations of meta-analyses based upon small studies with heterogeneous results, including a Cochrane Collaboration review published just a few months ago, he added. The Cochrane report, based upon 11 studies involving 2,710 patients, concluded that telemonitoring programs for patients with chronic heart failure reduced the risk of all-cause mortality by one-third and all-cause hospitalization by 21% (Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. Aug. 4, 2010;CD007228. Review).
Health systems are under mounting pressure to reduce hospital readmissions, pressure that will intensify under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. In this regard, Dr. Yancy noted that his recent Google search of the terms 'telemonitoring and heart failure' brought up 87,000 entries. The entire first page consisted of commercial advertisements for available systems.
“Every commercial application I opened had an implicit promise, almost a guarantee, of reduced costs and better outcomes for your patients with heart failure. We need to retard this kind of unbridled rush to a technology,” he concluded.
Another discussant of the trials, Dr. Lynne Warner Stevenson, stressed that telemonitoring for heart failure isn't dead, but for it to be effective the right physiologic variables related to fluid balance need to be monitored. What's being monitored now – changes in body weight and symptoms – are inadequate as harbingers of decompensation. Ambulatory hemodynamic monitoring via implanted devices, now under study, holds more promise.
With more responsive physiologic measures and improved electronic technology, it should be possible for heart failure patients to monitor their disease status and adjust their own diuretic therapy without the labor-intense daily remote involvement of physicians and nurses, predicted Dr. Stevenson, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the cardiomyopathy and heart failure program at Brigham and Women's Hospital, both in Boston.
Dr. Chaudhry, Dr. Yancy, and Dr. Stevenson declared having no relevant financial interests. The TIM-HF trial was funded by the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology in partnership with several technology companies. Dr. Anker disclosed that he serves as a consultant to one of those companies, Robert Bosch Healthcare.
'There was no benefit seen in either of these well-designed clinical trials.'
Source DR. YANCY