Author: Bertagnin, Enrico; Greco, Antonio; Bottaro, Giuseppe; Zappulla, Paolo; Romanazzi, Imma; Daniela Russo, Maria; Lo Presti, Marco; Valenti, Noemi; Sollano, Giuseppe; Calvi, Valeria
Title: Remote Monitoring for Heart Failure Management during COVID-19 Cord-id: l9j8f9ke Document date: 2021_1_28
ID: l9j8f9ke
Snippet: Background COVID-19 pandemic impacted on heart failure patients’ lifestyle and quality of life, affecting both physical activity levels and state of health. Methods Demographic data and device records were extracted for patients with heart failure in the 16 weeks at the turn of lockdown during pandemic. To explore the variability across the lockdown period, a week-to-week analysis was performed. Patients were interviewed to investigate on physical activity and psychological insights. The prima
Document: Background COVID-19 pandemic impacted on heart failure patients’ lifestyle and quality of life, affecting both physical activity levels and state of health. Methods Demographic data and device records were extracted for patients with heart failure in the 16 weeks at the turn of lockdown during pandemic. To explore the variability across the lockdown period, a week-to-week analysis was performed. Patients were interviewed to investigate on physical activity and psychological insights. The primary endpoint was the variation in physical activity at the turn of lockdown. Results At our facility, 2,225 patients implanted with a cardiac device were screened and data were collected for 211 patients fulfilling the inclusion criteria. Patients’ physical activity significantly decreased in the lockdown period compared with the control period (active time per day 8.0% vs. 10.8%; relative reduction [RRR] 25.9%; p<0.0001). A small decrease was noted for mean heart rate (70.1 vs. 71.7 beats per minute [bpm]; RRR 2.2%; p<0.0001), while thoracic impedance slightly increased (82.2 vs. 82.7 ohm; RRR 0.6%; p = 0.001). Patients’ physical activity decreased from week 7 to week 11 (10.9% vs. 6.9%; RRR 36.7%; P<0.0001) with an increase between week 11 and week 16 (6.9% vs. 8.5%; RRR 18.8%; P<0.0001). Patients’ perceptions about physical activity showed a very low correlation with remote monitoring-assessed physical activity levels (r2=0.035). Conclusions Telemedicine and remote monitoring characterized the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on vital signs and physical activity levels of heart failure patients, playing a crucial role in the prediction of heart failure worsening during circumstances discouraging outpatient visits.
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