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Optimisation of Heart Failure Management in Nursing Homes Using Point-of-Care Ultrasonography: Harmonious Trial Rationale and Design

Overview
Journal Zdr Varst
Publisher Sciendo
Specialty Public Health
Date 2020 Sep 21
PMID 32952713
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Introduction: Heart failure is common in the nursing home population and presents many diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. Point-of-care ultrasonography is a bedside method that can be used to assess volume status more reliably than clinical examination. This trial was conceived to test whether point-of-care ultrasonography-guided management improves heart failure outcomes among nursing home residents.

Methods: Nursing home residents with heart failure will be enrolled in a multi-centre, prospective, randomised controlled trial. Residents will first be screened for heart failure. Patients with heart failure will be randomised in 1:1 fashion into two groups. Nursing home physicians will adjust diuretic therapy according to volume status for six months. Point-of-care ultrasonography will be used in the test group and clinical examination in the control group. The primary endpoint will be heart failure deterioration, defined as a composite of any of the following four events: the need for an intravenous diuretic application, the need for an emergency service intervention, the need for unplanned hospitalisation for non-injury causes, or death from whatever cause.

Expected Results: The expected prevalence of heart failure among nursing home residents is above 10%. Point-of-care ultrasonography-guided heart failure management will reduce the number of deteriorations of heart failure in the nursing home population.

Conclusion: This study will explore the usefulness of point-of-care ultrasonography for heart failure management in the nursing home population.

Citing Articles

Health-related Quality of Life Increases After First-time Acute Myocardial Infarction: a Population-based Study.

Gasecka A, Rzepa B, Skwarek A, Cwiek A, Pluta K, Szarpak L Zdr Varst. 2022; 61(1):24-31.

PMID: 35111263 PMC: 8776287. DOI: 10.2478/sjph-2022-0005.

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