Observational Study on the Validation of Family Doctors' Training in Echocardiography The Catalan Society of Family and Community Medicine (CAMFiC) developed a structured training program for Family Physicians in focused cardiac ultrasound (FoCUS). This study evaluates GP FoCUS performance against comprehensive echocardiography and assesses training competence. Developed between September 2023 and November 2025 (92 hours total, including 70 hours supervised practice), participants perform FoCUS on patients with suspected cardiac pathology. The study measures concordance between GP FoCUS and cardiologist echocardiography, and evaluates FoCUS integration into primary care pathways to enhance diagnostic capacity for common cardiac conditions.
ACKGROUND \& JUSTIFICATION Cardiovascular disease generates long cardiology waiting lists in Spain (\>90 days echocardiography). Elderly patients discharged from hospital require cardiac follow-up in primary care, but Family Medicine residency (MIR) excludes point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) training. This gap limits GP triage capacity for common cardiac pathology. The Catalan Society of Family and Community Medicine (CAMFiC), in collaboration with the Catalan Society of Cardiology (SCC), developed a structured FoCUS training program (2022, 92 hours total: 18h theory + 4h workshop for cardiac views + 70h supervised hospital practice) to empower primary care physicians. HYPOTHESIS Primary Hypotheses: 1. Structured FoCUS training enables GPs to achieve competency across ≥6/7 predefined domains (standard views, LVEF estimation, RV/volume assessment, valvular disease detection, pericardial effusion, LVH recognition, theoretical knowledge). 2. This training program achieves ≥80% concordance between GP-performed FoCUS and cardiologist-performed standard echocardiography on predefined cardiac parameters (κ≥0.6). Secondary Hypotheses: 3. Trained GP will be able to integrate this technique into routine practice (≥1 scan/week). 4. FoCUS enables documentation of key cardiac pathologies (LVEF impairment, RV dilation, significant valve disease, pericardial effusion) among primary care scans performed for clinical indications (dyspnea, heart murmur, suspected HF, arrhythmia). 5. FoCUS plus clinical data identifies ≥3 distinct patient profiles among primary care patients assessed. 6. FoCUS in primary care achieves appropriate triage of patients requiring formal echocardiography. 7. The programme will be acceptable to stakeholders, with high satisfaction reported by patients, family doctors, and cardiologists participating in the programme. 8. FoCUS in primary care will increase identification of suspected heart failure among assessed patients and may reduce time to appropriate management. STUDY OVERVIEW Prospective observational study (CEIm IDIAP 23/072-P). 46 CAMFiC GPs perform FoCUS on consecutive adult patients (\>18 years) with clinical cardiac indication during primary care visits, followed by cardiologist echocardiography confirmation. Data captured via REDCap eCRF. See Outcomes, Eligibility Criteria, and Arms/Interventions for specific measures, criteria, and procedures. PHASES * Phase 0: Preparation (2022) * Phase 1: Training (2022-2025) * Phase 2: Data collection (2024-2027) * Phase 3: Analysis (kappa/ICC/Bland-Altman, mixed models) (2027-2028) * Phase 4: Dissemination (PhD thesis, peer-reviewed publications) (2028) CLINICAL IMPACT Reduces time-to-diagnosis, shortens cardiology waiting lists, enables primary care triage of common cardiac conditions, cost-effective, scalable model. PROTOCOL AVAILABILITY Full protocol available upon request from IDIAP Jordi Gol Primary Care Research Institute. See structured sections (Outcomes, Eligibility Criteria, Arms/Interventions) for specific measures, criteria, and procedures.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
500
1. Accredited curriculum: 18 hours of online theory (2.7 CCFCPS credits) with a mandatory 20-item MCQ assessing knowledge and image interpretation. 2. Structured, supervised scanning volume: 4-hour hands-on introductory session on core cardiac views using healthy volunteers, followed by 70 hours of supervised clinical training with a hospital cardiologist, including a predefinied target of 60 FoCUS examinations per GP.
Eligible patients are those seen in routine primary care by participating GPs who, based on usual clinical judgment, need an echocardiographic assessment. In these cases, the GP will perform a FoCUS scan as part of the consultation and record a standard set of variables in the study eCRF. When the patient subsequently undergoes a comprehensive echocardiography in cardiology, both assessments (GP FoCUS and cardiology echocardiography) will be paired to evaluate agreement. No additional tests or extra study visits are required beyond usual care.
Societat Catalana de Medicina Familiar i Comunitària (CAMFiC)
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Agreement between GP-performed FoCUS and cardiologist-performed standard echocardiography.
Agreement between GP-performed FoCUS and cardiologist-performed standard echocardiography on key cardiac parameters: left ventricular systolic function (preserved vs. reduced), cavity sizes (normal vs. dilated), and significant valve abnormalities (none vs. moderate-severe). Additional parameters include pericardial effusion and IVC dilation. Measured by weighted kappa coefficient comparing blinded independent interpretations of the same patients. Higher κ = better agreement. Clinical competency threshold κ ≥ 0.6 (substantial agreement). Unit of measure: Weighted kappa coefficient (0-1)
Time frame: Diagnostic agreement assessment in real-world clinical practice following training completion (2024-2027 recruitment period).
GPs knowledge and competence after FoCUS training
Change from baseline in 20-item MCQ knowledge score + % practical competencies checklist + simulator pass rate, assessing FoCUS training effectiveness for GPs (Objective 1).
Time frame: Training completion (6-8 months post-enrolment)
FoCUS routine integration in clinical practice
Proportion of trained GPs regularly using FoCUS (≥1/week) in primary care consultations, assessed by participant survey at end of recruitment (Objective 3).
Time frame: Following completion of recruitment (December 2027), a survey will be conducted among the 46 family physicians who have participated in this training program to assess the proportion regularly applying FoCUS (≥1/week) in routine primary care consultation
FoCUS indications and abnormalities documented.
Frequency of predefined indications (dyspnea, heart murmur, suspected heart failure, cardiac arrhythmia) and key abnormalities documented during routine FoCUS use (Objective 4).
Time frame: Documentation analysis of FoCUS performed during study period for clinical indications and documented key abnormalities: first half of 2028 (January-June 2028), following recruitment completion and REDCap data extraction.
Time from FoCUS triage to specialist care
Time elapsed from the detection of significant cardiac findings using FoCUS to care by a specialist/echocardiography in general practitioners trained in FoCUS versus standard care, evaluating the benefits of triage and accelerated care pathways (hypothesis 6+8).
Time frame: Real-world implementation (2024-2027)
Programme acceptability and satisfaction
Satisfaction scores (1-5 Likert scale) from patients, GPs, and cardiologists regarding FoCUS programme acceptability and usability (Objective 7).
Time frame: Programme completion (2027)
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