| February 24, 2005
Penn Study Will Compare Heart
Failure
Management Technologies
(Philadelphia, PA) – Researchers at the Hospital
of the University of Pennsylvania (HUP) have
been awarded a $1.5 million dollar grant from the Agency
for Health Care Research and Quality and the National
Institutes of Health to study disease management technologies
in patients with heart failure, and patients with both
heart failure and diabetes. The principal investigator
for the two-site trial is Lee Goldberg, MD,
MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine and Medical
Director of the Heart-Lung Transplant Program.
The objective of this study is to assess the impact
of health information technologies on clinical and financial
outcomes for patients with symptomatic (NYHA Class II
– IV) heart failure. The information technologies
include remote monitoring (telemonitoring) of vital
signs and symptoms, an electronic health record system
and clinical decision support systems. This study will
test a scalable, reproducible model for technology-supported
heart failure management; and its results should assist
purchasers, payers, and policy makers in selecting health
information technologies to improve clinical and financial
outcomes.
“An estimated 4.8 million Americans have heart
failure, with an estimated 400,000 new cases arising
each year,” explains Dr. Goldberg. “The
costs of treating these patients are skyrocketing and
are only expected to grow as the population ages. In
order to curb healthcare costs, we hope to develop protocols
by which we can provide patients with the latest proven
technologies to help them manage their homecare more
effectively in order to reduce emergency rooms visits
and improve outcomes.”
The study will evaluate two different configurations
of health information technologies. One is Technology
Supported Case Management, a combination
of telemonitoring and telephone nurse case management.
The other is Technology Supported Self Management,
which combines telemonitoring with an expert clinical-decision
support system that assesses vital signs and symptoms
for risk of decompensation – failure of the heart
to maintain adequate blood circulation – and guides
patients through a step-by-step problem solving procedure.
The heart failure patients participating in the study
will be randomized to:
1. Home technology including a scale, blood pressure
cuff, heart rate monitor (and glucometer, if diabetic)
with the information going to a nurse to evaluate and
triage.
2. Home technology including a scale, blood pressure
cuff, heart rate monitor (and glucometer, if diabetic)
with the information going into a ‘smart box’
that evaluates a patient’s objective data and
then asks a series of subjective questions that are
determined by the data. The box then helps the patient
self manage or guides them to contact their physician
or nurse.
3. Usual heart failure care.
A total of 325 subjects will be enrolled during the
next 18 months at the two study sites – HUP and
Saint Vincent Healthcare in Billings, Montana. The University
of Louisville will be the data-coordinating center.
HUP based patients will be recruited from Philadelphia,
its surrounding suburbs and southern New Jersey. Saint
Vincent Healthcare volunteers will be enrolled from
the urban, remote and rural catchment areas of southern
Montana and northern Wyoming, including the Indian Health
Service.
Volunteers must be documented heart failure patients.
Participants must have had two symptomatic heart failure
events within the past year requiring a trip to an emergency
room. A primary care physician or internist must be
managing each volunteer’s heart failure. Participants
must also have the physical and cognitive ability to
use the telephone, a scale (ability to stand unsupported
for 20 seconds), a blood pressure monitor, blood glucose
monitor (if needed), or the once-daily presence of a
caregiver who is willing and able to assist with the
procedures required by the study, and a working telephone
with touchtone line and phone jack, or access to one.
Anyone interested should call Valerie Hatton RN, BSN,
CCRP at (215) 615-0817 or valerie.hatton@uphs.upenn.edu.
For
a printer friendly version of this release,
click
here.
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PENN Medicine is a $2.7 billion
enterprise dedicated to the related missions of medical
education, biomedical research, and high-quality patient
care. PENN Medicine consists of the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine (founded in 1765 as the nation’s
first medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania
Health System (created in 1993 as the nation’s
first integrated academic health system).
Penn’s School of Medicine is ranked #3 in the
nation for receipt of NIH research funds; and ranked
#4 in the nation in U.S. News & World Report’s
most recent ranking of top research-oriented medical
schools. Supporting 1,400 fulltime faculty and 700 students,
the School of Medicine is recognized worldwide for its
superior education and training of the next generation
of physician-scientists and leaders of academic medicine.
Penn Health System is comprised of: its flagship hospital,
the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, consistently
rated one of the nation’s “Honor Roll”
hospitals by U.S. News & World Report; Pennsylvania
Hospital, the nation's first hospital; Presbyterian
Medical Center; a faculty practice plan; a primary-care
provider network; two multispecialty satellite facilities;
and home health care and hospice.
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