STRONG-HF showed that rapid up-titration of renin-angiotensin inhibitor (RASI), beta-blocker, and mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist (MRA) to full optimal doses within 2 weeks post-discharge from a hospital admission for acute heart failure (AHF), using frequent safety assessments, significantly reduced the 180-day risk of HF readmission or death and significantly increased 90-day quality of life regardless of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). Recent evidence also suggests that initiation of angiotensin-receptor neprilysin inhibitor (ARNI) and SGLT-2 inhibitors close to the time of discharge regardless of LVEF, and iron supplementation where indicated, improve patient prognosis. In this prospective registry of patients not treated with optimal doses of oral HF medications being discharged from an admission for AHF, ROBUST-HF, data will be collected describing their post-discharge care including the management of their oral HF medications and frequency and content of post-discharge assessments and clinical outcomes through 6 months post discharge.
The registry has three main aims: 1. Describe in a multi-national multi-site registry the post-discharge care of patients with AHF, inclusive of number of post-discharge visits and their timing, care providers conducting those visits, medications prescribed to patients, follow-up exams, inclusive of labs and NT-proBNP and finally outcomes during the first 6 months post-discharge. 2. Provide professional education and resources for physicians to accelerate the initiation and up-titration of evidence-based, guideline-directed medical therapies in appropriate patients following AHF hospitalization. 3. Provide hospitals and country leaders information on patterns of care for patients discharged from an admission for acute HF by summarizing and providing benchmark data reports. This is a prospective, multinational, multicenter, observational registry of patients admitted to hospital more than 72 hours for AHF who were not previously treated with optimal doses of GDMT for HF. Prior to enrollment of patients in the registry, participating investigators will be trained with respect to best practices for management of GDMT. Patients at participating centers who meet all eligibility criteria will be enrolled at least 72 hours following admission to hospital for AHF, and data regarding the patient's characteristics and the initial hospitalization will be collected. Data including examinations, blood test results, and prescribed medications will be collected for each post-discharge outpatient visit through 6 months post-discharge. Detail regarding any death or re-hospitalization through 6 months will be collected. Patients will be contacted by phone at 6 months to assess vital status, the occurrence of any rehospitalizations, and prescribed HF medications. Patients will be enrolled into the registry in each site in at least two blocks. Each block within site will represent a period of 4 months during which at least 15 patients will be enrolled. After the end of the 4-month enrolment period and after the enrolled patients have been followed for 6 months, data from these patients will be summarized and presented to the site. Following discussions with the sites, a second period of 4 months during which an additional at least 15 patients will be enrolled will be undertaken. Once the last patient in this enrolment period has reached 6 months follow up, data will be again summarized and presented to the site for discussion. Professional education regarding effective implementation of most recent guideline-directed medical therapy will be carried out, both before the initiation of a site and during the study, as well as after all patients in the first enrolment period and second enrolment period have reached 6 months follow-up and the data summarized and presented to the site. Efforts would include site-level discussions, country-level meetings/teleconferences and global meetings/teleconferences. Educational efforts will be aimed at providing the most up to date cardiovascular science and guidelines and best practice sharing to facilitate the transfer of knowledge into practice; as well as highlighting performance gaps and providing strategies to improve that performance driving to improving patient outcomes.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
5,000
Characteristics of patients admitted to hospital for heart failure
Description of characteristics of patients enrolled including demographics, general and heart failure medical history, pre-admission and discharge HF medications, vital signs and laboratory findings
Time frame: Baseline
Description of the HF meds prescribed at discharge, and 2 weeks, and 1, 3 and 6 months with respect to optimal doses
Proportions of patients on any and on \<½, ½-\<full and ≥ full optimal doses of heart failure medication in each class (renin-angiotensin-system inhibitor or angiotensin receptor-neprilysin inhibitor, mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist, beta blocker, sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitor) at hospital discharge (baseline), and 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months post hospital discharge
Time frame: Baseline, Week 2, Month 1, Month 3, Month 6
Risk of death through 6 months
Cumulative risk of all-cause death through 6 months post hospital discharge
Time frame: Month 6
Risk of cardiovascular death through 6 months
Cumulative risk of CV death through 6 months post hospital discharge
Time frame: Month 6
Risk of rehospitalization through 6 months
Cumulative risk of re-hospitalization through 6 months post hospital discharge
Time frame: Month 6
Risk of heart failure rehospitalization through 6 months
Cumulative risk of HF re-hospitalization through 6 months post hospital discharge
Time frame: Month 6
Risk of heart failure rehospitalization or cardiovascular death through 6 months
Cumulative risk of first HF re-hospitalization or CV death through 6 months post discharge
Time frame: Month 6
Proportion with follow-up visit within 1 week, 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months post discharge
Proportion of patients with 1 or more follow-up visits within 1 week, 2 weeks, and 1, 3, and 6 months post hospital discharge
Time frame: Week 1, Week 2, Month 1, Month 3, Month 6
Average time from discharge to first visit
Average number of days between discharge from the hospitalization for acute heart failure and the first outpatient visit post hospital discharge within 6 months
Time frame: Month 6
Average number of follow-up visits within 3 and 6 months
Average number of outpatient follow-up visits within 3 and 6 months post discharge
Time frame: Month 3, Month 6
Proportion of post-discharge visits through 6 months where laboratory values measured
Proportion of post-discharge visits through 6 months where laboratory values, including NT-proBNP, measured
Time frame: Month 6
Proportion of post-discharge visits through 6 months where vital signs measured
Proportion of post-discharge visits through 6 months where vital signs measured
Time frame: Month 6
Proportion of post-discharge visits through 6 months where clinical assessment of congestion done
Proportion of post-discharge visits through 6 months clinical assessments of congestion done
Time frame: Month 6
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