Better outcome at lower costs after implementing a CRT‐care pathway: comprehensive evaluation of real‐world data

Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT‐c...

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Published inESC Heart Failure Vol. 9; no. 4; pp. 2518 - 2527
Main Authors Stipdonk, Antonius M.W., Schretlen, Stijn, Dohmen, Wim, Knackstedt, Christian, Beckers‐Wesche, Fabienne, Debie, Luuk, Brunner‐La Rocca, Hans‐Peter, Vernooy, Kevin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.08.2022
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Wiley
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ISSN2055-5822
2055-5822
DOI10.1002/ehf2.13958

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Abstract Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT‐care pathway (CRT‐CPW) on clinical outcome and costs. Methods and results The CRT‐CPW focused on structuring CRT patient selection, implantation, and follow‐up management. To facilitate and guarantee quality, checklists were introduced. The CRT‐CPW was implemented in the Maastricht University Medical Centre in 2014. Physician‐led usual care was restructured to a nurse‐led care pathway. A retrospective comparison of data from CRT patients receiving usual care (2012–2014, 222 patients) and patients receiving care according to CRT‐CPW (2015–2018, 241 patients) was performed. The primary outcome was the composite of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalization. Hospital‐related costs of cardiovascular care after CRT implantation were analysed to address cost‐effectiveness of the CRT‐CPW. Demographics were comparable in the usual care and CRT‐CPW groups. Kaplan–Meier estimates of the occurrence of the primary endpoint showed a significant improvement in the CRT‐CPW group (25.7% vs. 34.7%, hazard ratio 0.56; confidence interval 0.40–0.78; P < 0.005), at 36 months of follow‐up. The total costs for cardiology‐related hospitalizations were significantly reduced in the CRT‐CPW group [€17 698 (14 192–21 195) vs. 19 933 (16 980–22 991), P < 0.001]. Bootstrap cost‐effectiveness analyses showed that implementation of CRT‐CPW would be an economically dominant strategy in 90.7% of bootstrap samples. Conclusions The introduction of a novel multidisciplinary, nurse‐led care pathway for CRT patients resulted in significant reduction of the combination of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalizations, at reduced cardiovascular‐related hospital costs.
AbstractList Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT‐care pathway (CRT‐CPW) on clinical outcome and costs. Methods and results The CRT‐CPW focused on structuring CRT patient selection, implantation, and follow‐up management. To facilitate and guarantee quality, checklists were introduced. The CRT‐CPW was implemented in the Maastricht University Medical Centre in 2014. Physician‐led usual care was restructured to a nurse‐led care pathway. A retrospective comparison of data from CRT patients receiving usual care (2012–2014, 222 patients) and patients receiving care according to CRT‐CPW (2015–2018, 241 patients) was performed. The primary outcome was the composite of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalization. Hospital‐related costs of cardiovascular care after CRT implantation were analysed to address cost‐effectiveness of the CRT‐CPW. Demographics were comparable in the usual care and CRT‐CPW groups. Kaplan–Meier estimates of the occurrence of the primary endpoint showed a significant improvement in the CRT‐CPW group (25.7% vs. 34.7%, hazard ratio 0.56; confidence interval 0.40–0.78; P < 0.005), at 36 months of follow‐up. The total costs for cardiology‐related hospitalizations were significantly reduced in the CRT‐CPW group [€17 698 (14 192–21 195) vs. 19 933 (16 980–22 991), P < 0.001]. Bootstrap cost‐effectiveness analyses showed that implementation of CRT‐CPW would be an economically dominant strategy in 90.7% of bootstrap samples. Conclusions The introduction of a novel multidisciplinary, nurse‐led care pathway for CRT patients resulted in significant reduction of the combination of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalizations, at reduced cardiovascular‐related hospital costs.
Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT-care pathway (CRT-CPW) on clinical outcome and costs. The CRT-CPW focused on structuring CRT patient selection, implantation, and follow-up management. To facilitate and guarantee quality, checklists were introduced. The CRT-CPW was implemented in the Maastricht University Medical Centre in 2014. Physician-led usual care was restructured to a nurse-led care pathway. A retrospective comparison of data from CRT patients receiving usual care (2012-2014, 222 patients) and patients receiving care according to CRT-CPW (2015-2018, 241 patients) was performed. The primary outcome was the composite of all-cause mortality and HF hospitalization. Hospital-related costs of cardiovascular care after CRT implantation were analysed to address cost-effectiveness of the CRT-CPW. Demographics were comparable in the usual care and CRT-CPW groups. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the occurrence of the primary endpoint showed a significant improvement in the CRT-CPW group (25.7% vs. 34.7%, hazard ratio 0.56; confidence interval 0.40-0.78; P < 0.005), at 36 months of follow-up. The total costs for cardiology-related hospitalizations were significantly reduced in the CRT-CPW group [€17 698 (14 192-21 195) vs. 19 933 (16 980-22 991), P < 0.001]. Bootstrap cost-effectiveness analyses showed that implementation of CRT-CPW would be an economically dominant strategy in 90.7% of bootstrap samples. The introduction of a novel multidisciplinary, nurse-led care pathway for CRT patients resulted in significant reduction of the combination of all-cause mortality and HF hospitalizations, at reduced cardiovascular-related hospital costs.
Abstract Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT‐care pathway (CRT‐CPW) on clinical outcome and costs. Methods and results The CRT‐CPW focused on structuring CRT patient selection, implantation, and follow‐up management. To facilitate and guarantee quality, checklists were introduced. The CRT‐CPW was implemented in the Maastricht University Medical Centre in 2014. Physician‐led usual care was restructured to a nurse‐led care pathway. A retrospective comparison of data from CRT patients receiving usual care (2012–2014, 222 patients) and patients receiving care according to CRT‐CPW (2015–2018, 241 patients) was performed. The primary outcome was the composite of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalization. Hospital‐related costs of cardiovascular care after CRT implantation were analysed to address cost‐effectiveness of the CRT‐CPW. Demographics were comparable in the usual care and CRT‐CPW groups. Kaplan–Meier estimates of the occurrence of the primary endpoint showed a significant improvement in the CRT‐CPW group (25.7% vs. 34.7%, hazard ratio 0.56; confidence interval 0.40–0.78; P < 0.005), at 36 months of follow‐up. The total costs for cardiology‐related hospitalizations were significantly reduced in the CRT‐CPW group [€17 698 (14 192–21 195) vs. 19 933 (16 980–22 991), P < 0.001]. Bootstrap cost‐effectiveness analyses showed that implementation of CRT‐CPW would be an economically dominant strategy in 90.7% of bootstrap samples. Conclusions The introduction of a novel multidisciplinary, nurse‐led care pathway for CRT patients resulted in significant reduction of the combination of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalizations, at reduced cardiovascular‐related hospital costs.
Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT‐care pathway (CRT‐CPW) on clinical outcome and costs. Methods and results The CRT‐CPW focused on structuring CRT patient selection, implantation, and follow‐up management. To facilitate and guarantee quality, checklists were introduced. The CRT‐CPW was implemented in the Maastricht University Medical Centre in 2014. Physician‐led usual care was restructured to a nurse‐led care pathway. A retrospective comparison of data from CRT patients receiving usual care (2012–2014, 222 patients) and patients receiving care according to CRT‐CPW (2015–2018, 241 patients) was performed. The primary outcome was the composite of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalization. Hospital‐related costs of cardiovascular care after CRT implantation were analysed to address cost‐effectiveness of the CRT‐CPW. Demographics were comparable in the usual care and CRT‐CPW groups. Kaplan–Meier estimates of the occurrence of the primary endpoint showed a significant improvement in the CRT‐CPW group (25.7% vs. 34.7%, hazard ratio 0.56; confidence interval 0.40–0.78; P < 0.005), at 36 months of follow‐up. The total costs for cardiology‐related hospitalizations were significantly reduced in the CRT‐CPW group [€17 698 (14 192–21 195) vs. 19 933 (16 980–22 991), P < 0.001]. Bootstrap cost‐effectiveness analyses showed that implementation of CRT‐CPW would be an economically dominant strategy in 90.7% of bootstrap samples. Conclusions The introduction of a novel multidisciplinary, nurse‐led care pathway for CRT patients resulted in significant reduction of the combination of all‐cause mortality and HF hospitalizations, at reduced cardiovascular‐related hospital costs.
Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT-care pathway (CRT-CPW) on clinical outcome and costs.AIMSCardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time, resources, and coordination of care, in current practice, this is often incomplete. We evaluated the effect of the introduction of a CRT-care pathway (CRT-CPW) on clinical outcome and costs.The CRT-CPW focused on structuring CRT patient selection, implantation, and follow-up management. To facilitate and guarantee quality, checklists were introduced. The CRT-CPW was implemented in the Maastricht University Medical Centre in 2014. Physician-led usual care was restructured to a nurse-led care pathway. A retrospective comparison of data from CRT patients receiving usual care (2012-2014, 222 patients) and patients receiving care according to CRT-CPW (2015-2018, 241 patients) was performed. The primary outcome was the composite of all-cause mortality and HF hospitalization. Hospital-related costs of cardiovascular care after CRT implantation were analysed to address cost-effectiveness of the CRT-CPW. Demographics were comparable in the usual care and CRT-CPW groups. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the occurrence of the primary endpoint showed a significant improvement in the CRT-CPW group (25.7% vs. 34.7%, hazard ratio 0.56; confidence interval 0.40-0.78; P < 0.005), at 36 months of follow-up. The total costs for cardiology-related hospitalizations were significantly reduced in the CRT-CPW group [€17 698 (14 192-21 195) vs. 19 933 (16 980-22 991), P < 0.001]. Bootstrap cost-effectiveness analyses showed that implementation of CRT-CPW would be an economically dominant strategy in 90.7% of bootstrap samples.METHODS AND RESULTSThe CRT-CPW focused on structuring CRT patient selection, implantation, and follow-up management. To facilitate and guarantee quality, checklists were introduced. The CRT-CPW was implemented in the Maastricht University Medical Centre in 2014. Physician-led usual care was restructured to a nurse-led care pathway. A retrospective comparison of data from CRT patients receiving usual care (2012-2014, 222 patients) and patients receiving care according to CRT-CPW (2015-2018, 241 patients) was performed. The primary outcome was the composite of all-cause mortality and HF hospitalization. Hospital-related costs of cardiovascular care after CRT implantation were analysed to address cost-effectiveness of the CRT-CPW. Demographics were comparable in the usual care and CRT-CPW groups. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the occurrence of the primary endpoint showed a significant improvement in the CRT-CPW group (25.7% vs. 34.7%, hazard ratio 0.56; confidence interval 0.40-0.78; P < 0.005), at 36 months of follow-up. The total costs for cardiology-related hospitalizations were significantly reduced in the CRT-CPW group [€17 698 (14 192-21 195) vs. 19 933 (16 980-22 991), P < 0.001]. Bootstrap cost-effectiveness analyses showed that implementation of CRT-CPW would be an economically dominant strategy in 90.7% of bootstrap samples.The introduction of a novel multidisciplinary, nurse-led care pathway for CRT patients resulted in significant reduction of the combination of all-cause mortality and HF hospitalizations, at reduced cardiovascular-related hospital costs.CONCLUSIONSThe introduction of a novel multidisciplinary, nurse-led care pathway for CRT patients resulted in significant reduction of the combination of all-cause mortality and HF hospitalizations, at reduced cardiovascular-related hospital costs.
Author Beckers‐Wesche, Fabienne
Dohmen, Wim
Knackstedt, Christian
Debie, Luuk
Brunner‐La Rocca, Hans‐Peter
Vernooy, Kevin
Stipdonk, Antonius M.W.
Schretlen, Stijn
AuthorAffiliation 1 Department of Cardiology, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht (CARIM) Maastricht University Medical Centre Maastricht The Netherlands
2 Medtronic Integrated Health Solutions Eindhoven The Netherlands
3 Cardiology Department Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The Netherlands
AuthorAffiliation_xml – name: 1 Department of Cardiology, Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht (CARIM) Maastricht University Medical Centre Maastricht The Netherlands
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CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1111_jne_13380
crossref_primary_10_1002_ehf2_14911
crossref_primary_10_1038_s41591_024_03296_w
crossref_primary_10_1080_14779072_2024_2445246
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Issue 4
Keywords Heart failure
Care pathway
Value-based health care
Cardiac resynchronization therapy
Cost-effectiveness
Language English
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2022 The Authors. ESC Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.
This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
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Notes Antonius M. W. van Stipdonk and S. Schretlen contributed equally as the first authors.
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Snippet Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in...
Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in time,...
Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to limitations in...
Abstract Aims Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) requires intensive, complex, and multidisciplinary care for heart failure (HF) patients. Due to...
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StartPage 2518
SubjectTerms Cardiac arrhythmia
Cardiac resynchronization therapy
Cardiology
Care pathway
Cost analysis
Cost reduction
Cost‐effectiveness
Heart attacks
Heart failure
Hospital costs
Hospitalization
Information systems
Ischemia
Mortality
Nurses
Original
Patients
Value‐based health care
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Title Better outcome at lower costs after implementing a CRT‐care pathway: comprehensive evaluation of real‐world data
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002%2Fehf2.13958
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