Optimal Heart Team Protocol to Improve Revascularization Decisions in Patients with Complex Coronary Artery Disease: A Sequential Mixed Method Study

Author:

Ma Hanping1,Lin Shen12,Li Xi1ORCID,Dou Kefei13,Yang Weixian13,Feng Wei12ORCID,Liu Sheng12,Wu Yuan13,Peng Boshizhang1,Zheng Zhe124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Clinical Research Center of Cardiovascular Diseases, State Key Laboratory of Cardiovascular Disease, Fuwai Hospital, National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, People's Republic of China

2. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Fuwai Hospital, National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, People's Republic of China

3. Department of Cardiology, Fuwai Hospital, National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, People's Republic of China

4. National Health Commission Key Laboratory of Cardiovascular Regenerative Medicine, Fuwai Central-China Hospital, Central-China Branch of National Center for Cardiovascular Diseases, Zhengzhou, People's Republic of China

Abstract

Abstract Aims Current guidelines recommend a heart team in the decision-making for patients with complex coronary artery disease (CAD). However, the decision-making stability of these teams has not been evaluated and the optimum protocol is unknown. We assessed inter-team agreement for revascularization decision-making and influencing factors to inform the development of a heart team protocol. Methods and results This sequential, explanatory mixed methods study included (i) a cross-sectional quantitative study to assess inter-team agreement on treatment strategy for retrospectively enrolled complex CAD patients and (ii) a qualitative study that used semi-structured interviews with heart team members to identify factors influencing decision-making discrepancy. We randomly selected 101 complex CAD patients. Sixteen specialists were randomly assigned to four heart teams to make decisions for these patients. The primary outcome kappa of inter-team decision-making agreement was moderate (kappa 0.58). Factors influencing decision-making were generated through inductive thematic analysis and were summarized by 3 themes (specialist quality, team composition, and meeting process) and 10 subthemes. Recommendations of heart team implementation were generated based on qualitative and quantitative data at five levels: specialist selection, specialist training, team composition, team training, and meeting process. A detailed protocol on the integration of guidelines, previous experience, and recommendations was generated to establish and deploy a qualified heart team. Conclusion Agreement between heart teams for revascularization decision-making in complex CAD patients was moderate. Potential factors associated with decision discrepancies were summarized and recommendations were generated. A detailed heart team protocol was designed and should be validated in future.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Beijing Municipal Commission of Science and Technology

Basic Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Health Policy

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