Description Module

Description Module

The Description Module contains narrative descriptions of the clinical trial, including a brief summary and detailed description. These descriptions provide important information about the study's purpose, methodology, and key details in language accessible to both researchers and the general public.

Description Module path is as follows:

Study -> Protocol Section -> Description Module

Description Module


Ignite Creation Date: 2025-12-24 @ 5:10 PM
Ignite Modification Date: 2025-12-24 @ 5:10 PM
NCT ID: NCT02936050
Brief Summary: The cost related to management of heart failure is significant, both with respect to the financial costs and the suffer of patients. Still as much as 50% of heart failure patients are readmitted within 6 months after hospitalization for decompensated heart failure. Specialized nurses have a growing role in diagnostics and follow-up of outpatient HF patients, and adding ultrasound diagnostics to the nurses consultations may improve care. In heart failure patients the use of ultrasound as a tool for assessing volume status and guidance of diuretic therapy are promising. Aim of the study is to evaluate the feasibility and reliability of echocardiographic acquisitions by heart failure nurses to assess cardiac function indices and assess volume status in outpatient heart failure clinics combined with a telemedicine approach for near real-time interpretation of the recordings by a cardiologist specialized in echocardiography and heart failure at a remote location.
Detailed Description: The worsening heart failure epidemic is a significant driver of health care expenditure with increasing costs, lost productivity and increased suffer of patients. Thus, there important to develop strategies to improve heart failure care and reduce hospital readmissions. Some progress in heart failure management has been made with new drug therapies and remote monitoring of patients with heart failure. This project aims to provide data which may add to the existing literature regarding the use of telemedicine for safe transfer of ultrasound data of relatively inexperienced users for qualitative and quantitative interpretation by experts at a different location. The authors will study whether diffusion of focused cardiac ultrasound to outpatient heart failure clinics with support of cardiologist provided by telemedicine is feasible and provides reliable data. Firstly, the investigators will study the use of high-end ultrasound machines connected to a wired broadband network with a CE-classified software providing safety and anonymization of all transferred data. This project could be of significant importance for further support for widening the use of ultrasound diagnostics, even when the expert is not at the same location as the health-care provider performing the ultrasound acquisition. For the patients this may allow for better and faster diagnostics, and thus treatment. For the health-care system this may both improve quality of diagnostics and therapy, and be cost-saving as well. Lastly, this could make the way for further innovations which again can improve diagnostics and thus therapy. Aims 1. To study the feasibility of implementing focused echocardiography and ultrasound examinations to assess volume status in a heart failure clinic where the caregiving nurses acquire the ultrasound images but have access to the near real-time interpretation by the cardiologist only by telemedicine. 2. To study the reliability of the measurements of cardiac size and function indices in ultrasound recordings acquired by heart failure nurses, provided to another location for interpretation by cardiologists by telemedicine, in comparison to reference imaging. 3. To study the clinical influence of implementing ultrasound examinations performed by nurses to assess volume status and cardiac function at outpatient heart failure clinics when the support and collaboration with the specialist is available by telemedicine only.
Study: NCT02936050
Study Brief:
Protocol Section: NCT02936050