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The First Year of Noninvasive Remote Telemonitoring in Chronic Heart Failure Is not Cost Saving but Improves Quality of Life: The Randomized Controlled CardioBBEAT Trial
Author(s) -
Heinz Völler,
Dominik Bindl,
Klaus Nagels,
R. Hofmann,
Eik Vettorazzi,
Karl Wegscheider,
Eckart Fleck,
Stefan Störk,
Eckhard Nagel
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
telemedicine and e-health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.951
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1556-3669
pISSN - 1530-5627
DOI - 10.1089/tmj.2022.0021
Subject(s) - medicine , quality of life (healthcare) , ejection fraction , clinical endpoint , heart failure , randomized controlled trial , clinical trial , nursing
Introduction: Remote telemonitoring (RTM) for patients with chronic heart failure (HF) holds promise to improve prognosis and well-being beyond the standard of care (SoC). The CardioBBEAT trial assessed the health economic and clinical impact of an interactive bidirectional RTM system (Motiva ® ) versus SoC for patients with HF and a reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), in Germany. Methods: This multicenter, randomized controlled trial enrolled 621 patients with HFrEF (mean age 63.0 ± 11.5 years, 88% men). The primary endpoint was the integrated effect of the intervention on total costs and nonhospitalized days alive after 12 months, reported as incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). Costs (in k€) were based on actual charges of patients' statutory health insurance. Among secondary outcome measures were mortality and disease-specific quality of life. Results: We found a neutral effect on nonhospitalized days alive (RTM mean 341 ± 59 days, SoC 346 ± 45 days; p  = 0.298) associated with increased total costs (RTM 18.5 ± 39.5 k€, SoC 12.8 ± 22.0 k€; p  = 0.046). This yielded an ICER of -1.15 k€/day. RTM did not impact mortality risk. All quality of life scales were consistently and meaningfully improved in the RTM group at 12 months compared to SoC (all p < 0.01). Conclusions: The first 12 months of RTM were not cost-effective compared to SoC in patients with HFrEF, but associated with a relevant improvement in disease-specific quality of life. The balanced assessment of the potential benefit of RTM requires integration of both the societal and patient perspective. ClinTrials.gov (NCT02293252).

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