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Home telemonitoring study for Japanese patients with heart failure (HOMES-HF): protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Hideki Hanaoka
Daisuke Nagatomo
Kazuhiro Yamamoto
Koichi Node
Masafumi Kitakaze
Hiroaki Shimokawa
Daigo Mine
Takayuki Inomata
Teruo Inoue
Shin Ichi Momomura
Yoshihiro Fukumoto
Yoshihiko Seino
Kazuo Eguchi
Kotaro Nochioka
Yoko Yamada
Tohru Masuyama
Yasunori Sato
Atsushi Mizuno
Machiko Asaka
Yoshiharu Kinugasa
Hiroyuki Tsutsui
Norihiko Kotooka
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
BMJ, 2013.

Abstract

Introduction Despite the encouraging results from several randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and meta-analyses, the ability of home telemonitoring for heart failure (HF) to improve patient outcomes remains controversial as a consequence of the two recent large-scale RCTs. However, it has been suggested that there is a subgroup of patients with HF who may benefit from telemonitoring. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether an HF management programme using telemonitoring could improve outcomes in patients with HF under the Japanese healthcare system. Methods and analysis The Home Telemonitoring Study for Japanese Patients with Heart Failure (HOMES-HF) study is a prospective, multicentre RCT to investigate the effectiveness of home telemonitoring on the primary composite endpoint of all-cause death and rehospitalisation due to worsening HF in recently admitted HF patients (aged 20 and older, New York Heart Association classes II–III). The telemonitoring system is an automated physiological monitoring system including body weight, blood pressure and pulse rate by full-time nurses 7 days a week. Additionally, the system was designed to make it a high priority to support patient9s self-care instead of an early detection of HF decompensation. A total sample size of 420 patients is planned according to the Schoenfeld and Richter method. Eligible patients are randomly assigned via a website to either the telemonitoring group or the usual care group by using a minimisation method with biased-coin assignment balancing on age, left ventricular ejection fraction and a history of ischaemic heart disease. Participants will be enrolled until August 2013 and followed until August 2014. Time to events will be estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and HRs and 95% CIs will be calculated using the Cox proportional hazards models with stratification factors. Trial Registration: The study is registered at UMIN Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN000006839).

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....23843575ab86f14832d803139a1b53b0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-002972