Author:
Harzand Arash,Alrohaibani Alaaeddin,Idris Muhammed Y.,Spence Hayden,Parrish Cate G.,Rout Pratik K.,Nazar Rene,Davis-Watts Michelle L.,Wright Phyllis P.,Vakili Alexander A.,Abdelhamid Smah,Vathsangam Harshvardhan,Adesanya Adelanwa,Park Linda G.,Whooley Mary A.,Wenger Nanette K.,Zafari A. Maziar,Shah Amit J.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) improves outcomes in heart disease yet remains vastly underutilized. Remote CR enhanced with a digital health intervention (DHI) may offer higher access and improved patient-centered outcomes over non-technology approaches. We sought to pragmatically determine whether offering a DHI improves CR access, cardiac risk profile, and patient-reported outcome measures.
Methods
Adults referred to CR at a tertiary VA medical center between October 2017 and December 2021 were offered enrollment into a DHI alongside other CR modalities using shared decision-making. The DHI consisted of remote CR with a structured, 3-month home exercise program enhanced with multi-component coaching, a commercial smartphone app, and wearable activity tracker. We measured completion rates among DHI participants and evaluated changes in 6-min walk distance, cardiovascular risk factors, and patient-reported outcomes from pre- to post-intervention.
Results
Among 1,643 patients referred to CR, 258 (16%) consented to the DHI where the mean age was 60 ± 9 years, 93% were male, and 48% were black. A majority (90%) of the DHI group completed the program. Over 3-months, significant improvements were seen in 6MWT (mean difference [MD] -29 m; 95% CI, 10 to 49; P < 0.01) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (MD -11 mg/dL; 95% CI, -17 to -5; P < 0.01), and the absolute proportion of patients who reported smoking decreased (10% vs 15%; MD, -5%; 95% CI, -8% to -2%; P < 0.01) among DHI participants with available data. No adverse events were reported.
Conclusions
The addition of a DHI-enhanced remote CR program was delivered in 16% of referred veterans and associated with improved CR access, markers of cardiovascular risk, and healthy behaviors in this real-world study. These findings support the continued implementation of DHIs for remote CR in real-world clinical settings.
Trial registration
This trial was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02791685 (07/06/2016).
Funder
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine