Antiarrhythmic drug loading at home using remote monitoring: a virtual feasibility study during COVID-19 social distancing

Author:

Shah Rajan L12ORCID,Kapoor Ridhima1,Bonnett Colleen13,Ottoboni Linda K1,Tacklind Christine1,Tsiperfal Angela1,Perez Marco V13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine (Cardiovascular Medicine), Stanford University School of Medicine, 300 Pasteur Drive, Stanford, CA 94305, USA

2. Section of Cardiac Electrophysiology, Stanford University Medical Partners, 365 Hawthorne Ave, Ste. 201, Oakland, CA 94609, USA

3. Stanford Center for Inherited Cardiovascular Diseases, Stanford University, 300 Pasteur Drive, A21 Heart Clinic, Palo Alto, CA 94305, USA

Abstract

Abstract The epidemiological necessity for distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in postponement of non-emergent hospitalizations and increase use of telemedicine. The feasibility of virtual antiarrhythmic drug (AAD) loading specifically with digital QTc electrocardiographic monitoring (EM) in conjunction with telemedicine video visits is not well established. We tested the hypothesis that existing digital health technologies and virtual communication platforms could provide EM and support medically guided AAD loading for patients with symptomatic tachyarrhythmia in the ambulatory setting, while reducing physical contact between patient and healthcare system. A prospective pilot, case series was approved by the institutional ethics committee, entailing three subjects with symptomatic arrhythmia during the COVID-19 pandemic who were enrolled for virtual AAD loading at home. Clinicians met with participants twice daily via video visits conducted after QTc analysis (Kardia 6L mobile sensor) and telemetry review (Mobile Cardiac Outpatient Telemetry of silent arrhythmias). Participants received direct instruction to either terminate the study or proceed with the next single dose of AAD. All participants completed contactless loading of five AAD doses, without untoward event. Scheduled video visits allowed dialogue and participant counselling where decision-making was guided by remote review of EM. Participant adherence with transmissions and scheduled visits was 98.3%; a single electrocardiogram was delayed beyond the 2 hours of post-dose schedule. This virtual approach reduced overall expenditures based on retrospective comparison with previous AAD load hospitalizations. We found that a ‘virtual hospitalization’ for AAD loading with remote EM and twice-daily virtual rounding is feasible using existing digital health technologies.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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