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Performance of first pacemaker to use smart device app for remote monitoring

Authors :
Antonio Porfilio
Martin Emert
Keith Holloman
Suneet Mittal
Abdul R. Maher
John Schoenhard
Mintu P. Turakhia
Naushad A. Shaik
Hanscy Seide
Niraj Varma
Ana C. Natera
Paul R. Roberts
Sherry L. Di Jorio
Giuseppe Augello
Baerbel Maus
Nilam Patel
Khaldoun G. Tarakji
Ashish Patwala
Samuel F. Sears
Giulio Molon
Steven L. Zweibel
Josh R. Silverstein
Amir Zaidi
James Allred
Source :
Heart Rhythm O2
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Background High adherence to remote monitoring (RM) in pacemaker (PM) patients improves outcomes; however, adherence remains suboptimal. Bluetooth low-energy (BLE) technology in newer-generation PMs enables communication directly with patient-owned smart devices using an app without a bedside console. Objective To evaluate the success rate of scheduled RM transmissions using the app compared to other RM methods. Methods The BlueSync Field Evaluation was a prospective, international cohort evaluation, measuring the success rate of scheduled RM transmissions using a BLE PM or cardiac resynchronization therapy PM coupled with the MyCareLink Heart app. App transmission success was compared to 3 historical “control” groups from the Medtronic de-identified CareLink database: (1) PM patients with manual communication using a wand with a bedside console (PM manual transmission), (2) PM patients with wireless automatic communication with the bedside console (PM wireless); (3) defibrillator patients with similar automatic communication (defibrillator wireless). Results Among 245 patients enrolled (age 64.8±15.6 years, 58.4% men), 953 transmissions were scheduled through 12 months, of which 902 (94.6%) were successfully completed. In comparison, transmission success rates were 56.3% for PM manual transmission patients, 77.0% for PM wireless patients, and 87.1% for defibrillator wireless patients. Transmission success with the app was superior across matched cohorts based on age, sex, and device type (single vs dual vs triple chamber). Conclusion The success rate of scheduled RM transmissions was higher among patients using the smart device app compared to patients using traditional RM using bedside consoles. This novel technology may improve patient engagement and adherence to RM.<br />Graphical abstract

Details

ISSN :
26665018
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart Rhythm O2
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e435b2b87a1c7e68fd469dc47e15bced
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hroo.2021.07.008