Journal article

Effects of remote haemodynamic-guided heart failure management in patients with different subtypes of pulmonary hypertension: insights from the MEMS-HF study


Authors listAssmus, Birgit; Angermann, Christiane E.; Alkhlout, Basil; Asselbergs, Folkert W.; Schnupp, Steffen; Brugts, Jasper J.; Nordbeck, Peter; Zhou, Qian; Brett, Marie-Elena; Ginn, Greg; Adamson, Philip B.; Bohm, Michael; Rosenkranz, Stephan

Publication year2022

Pages2320-2330

JournalEuropean Journal of Heart Failure

Volume number24

Issue number12

ISSN1388-9842

eISSN1879-0844

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.2656

PublisherWiley


Abstract
Aim The CardioMEMS European Monitoring Study for Heart Failure (MEMS-HF) investigated safety and efficacy of pulmonary artery pressure (PAP)-guided remote patient management (RPM) in New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III outpatients with at least one heart failure hospitalization (HFH) during the previous 12 months. This pre-specified subgroup analysis investigated whether RPM effects depended on presence and subtype of pulmonary hypertension (PH). Methods and results In 106/234 MEMS-HF participants, Swan-Ganz catheter tracings obtained during sensor implant were available for off-line manual analysis jointly performed by two experts. Patients were classified into subgroups according to current PH definitions. Isolated post-capillary PH (IpcPH) and combined post- and pre-capillary PH (CpcPH) were present in 38 and 36 patients, respectively, whereas 31 patients had no PH. Clinical characteristics were comparable between subgroups, but among patients with PH pulmonary vascular resistance was higher (p = 0.029) and pulmonary artery compliance lower (p = 0.003) in patients with CpcPH. During 12 months of PAP-guided RPM, all PAPs declined in IpcPH and CpcPH subgroups (all p < 0.05), whereas only mean and diastolic PAP decreased in patients without PH (both p < 0.05). Improvements in post- versus pre-implant HFH rates were similar in CpcPH (0.639 events/patient-year; hazard ratio [HR] 0.37) and IpcPH (0.72 events/patient-year; HR 0.45) patients. Participants without PH benefited most (0.26 events/patient-year; HR 0.17, p = 0.04 vs. IpcPH/CpcPH patients). Quality of life and NYHA class improved significantly in all subgroups. Conclusions Outpatients with NYHA class III symptoms with at least one HFH during 1 year pre-implant benefitted significantly from PAP-guided RPM during post-implant follow-up irrespective of presence or subtype of PH at baseline.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleAssmus, B., Angermann, C., Alkhlout, B., Asselbergs, F., Schnupp, S., Brugts, J., et al. (2022) Effects of remote haemodynamic-guided heart failure management in patients with different subtypes of pulmonary hypertension: insights from the MEMS-HF study, European Journal of Heart Failure, 24(12), pp. 2320-2330. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.2656

APA Citation styleAssmus, B., Angermann, C., Alkhlout, B., Asselbergs, F., Schnupp, S., Brugts, J., Nordbeck, P., Zhou, Q., Brett, M., Ginn, G., Adamson, P., Bohm, M., & Rosenkranz, S. (2022). Effects of remote haemodynamic-guided heart failure management in patients with different subtypes of pulmonary hypertension: insights from the MEMS-HF study. European Journal of Heart Failure. 24(12), 2320-2330. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejhf.2656



Keywords


ARTERY PRESSUREHospitalizationPRESERVED EJECTION FRACTIONPulmonary artery pressurePulmonary hypertensionRemote monitoring

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:46