Early Detection of Worsening Heart Failure in Patients at Home Using a New Telemonitoring System of Respiratory Stability

Circ J. 2022 Jun 24;86(7):1081-1091. doi: 10.1253/circj.CJ-21-0590. Epub 2021 Dec 11.

Abstract

Background: Early detection of worsening heart failure (HF) with a telemonitoring system crucially depends on monitoring parameters. The present study aimed to examine whether a serial follow up of all-night respiratory stability time (RST) built into a telemonitoring system could faithfully reflect ongoing deterioration in HF patients at home and detect early signs of worsening HF in a multicenter, prospective study.Methods and Results: Seventeen subjects with New York Heart Association class II or III were followed up for a mean of 9 months using a newly developed telemonitoring system equipped with non-attached sensor technologies and automatic RST analysis. Signals from the home sensor were transferred to a cloud server, where all-night RSTs were calculated every morning and traced by the monitoring center. During the follow up, 9 episodes of admission due to worsening HF and 1 episode of sudden death were preceded by progressive declines of RST. The receiver operating characteristic curve demonstrated that the progressive or sustained reduction of RST below 20 s during 28 days before hospital admission achieved the highest sensitivity of 90.0% and specificity of 81.7% to subsequent hospitalization, with an area under the curve of 0.85.

Conclusions: RST could serve as a sensitive and specific indicator of worsening HF and allow the detection of an early sign of clinical deterioration in the telemedical management of HF.

Keywords: Heart failure; Hospitalization; Respiratory instability; Respiratory stability time; Telemonitoring.

Publication types

  • Multicenter Study

MeSH terms

  • Heart Failure* / diagnosis
  • Hospitalization
  • Humans
  • Prospective Studies
  • Telemedicine* / methods