1. The role of a multidisciplinary heart failure clinic in optimization of guideline-directed medical therapy: HF-optimize.
- Author
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Diederich, Theresa, Burdorf, Adam, Pozehl, Bunny, Bowman, Stephanie, Ferguson, Kelly, Holder, Kyana, Alonso, Windy, Stoller, Douglas, and Lundgren, Scott
- Abstract
Guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) reduces mortality and hospitalizations in adults with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF); however, few are receiving GDMT. National registries show as few as 1% of patients are receiving appropriate GDMT. Development of heart failure clinics achieving optimal GDMT are crucial to improve outcomes for HFrEF patients. We developed a multidisciplinary HF-Optimize clinic aimed at improving GDMT use along with providing education, resources, and comorbidity screening for adults with HFrEF. We targeted patients with newly diagnosed HFrEF and/or recent or multiple admissions for 6 visits over 12 weeks. We measured medication use, ejection fraction, 6-minute walk test distance, and health-related quality of life (EuroQol Visual Analog Scale) at visits 1 and 6. One-hundred ten patients completed all visits. Patients were a mean age of 58 (±14) years, 37% were female, and 42% were of non-White race. From visit 1 to visit 6, utilization of GDMT increased from 35.5% to 85.5% (p < 0.001) and significant improvements in ejection fraction (25.9% to 35.5%, p < 0.001), 6-minute walk distance (1032 feet to 1121.7 feet, p = 0.001), and quality of life (63.8/100 vs 70.8/100, p = 0.002). Only 2 patients (1.8%) that completed HF-Optimize had a 30-day heart failure readmission. Our multidisciplinary HF-Optimize clinic improved medication usage and clinical outcomes. Further studies are needed to validate outcomes of multidisciplinary GDMT clinics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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