NCT04305717 · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Use of ReDS Technology in Patients With Acute Heart Failure
What this study is about
Background: Fluid overload, especially pulmonary congestion, is one of the main contributors into heart failure (HF) readmission risk and it is a clinical challenge for clinicians. The Remote dielectric sensing (ReDS) system is a novel electromagnetic energy-based technology that can accurately quantify changes in lung fluid concentration noninvasively.
View original scientific description
Background: Fluid overload, especially pulmonary congestion, is one of the main contributors into heart failure (HF) readmission risk and it is a clinical challenge for clinicians. The Remote dielectric sensing (ReDS) system is a novel electromagnetic energy-based technology that can accurately quantify changes in lung fluid concentration noninvasively. Previous non-randomized studies suggest that ReDS-guided management has the potential to reduce readmissions in HF patients recently discharged from the hospital. Aims: To test whether a ReDS-guided strategy during HF admission is superior to the standard of care during a 1-month follow up. Methods: The ReDS-SAFE HF trial is an investigator-initiated, single center, single blind, 2-arm randomized clinical trial, in which \~240 inpatients with acutely decompensated HF at Mount Sinai Hospital will be randomized to a) standard of care strategy, with a discharge scheme based on current clinical practice, or b) ReDS-guided strategy, with a discharge scheme based on specific target value given by the device on top of the current clinical practice. ReDS tests will be performed for all study patients, but results will be blinded for treating physicians in the "standard of care" arm. The primary outcome will be a composite of unplanned visit for HF that lead to the use of intravenous diuretics, hospitalization for worsening HF, or death from any cause at 30 days after discharge. Secondary outcomes including the components of the primary outcome alone, length of stay, quality of life, time-averaged proportional change in the natriuretic peptides plasma levels, and safety events as symptomatic hypotension, diselectrolytemias or worsening of renal function. Conclusions: The ReDS-SAFE HF trial will help to clarify the efficacy of a ReDS-guided strategy during HF-admission to improve the short-term prognosis of patients after a HF admission.
Interventions
DEVICE
ReDS-guided strategy
A discharge scheme based on specific target value given by the device
Primary outcome measures
Composite outcome
Time frame: 30 days after discharge
A composite of unplanned visit for ADHF that lead to the use of intravenous diuretics, hospitalization for worsening HF, or death from any cause at 30 days after discharge.
Who can participate
This study lists these criteria on ClinicalTrials.gov. A study coordinator reviews eligibility during screening — this page does not determine whether you qualify.
Inclusion criteria
- Age ≥ 18 years old
- Currently hospitalized for a primary diagnosis of HF, including symptoms and signs of fluid overload, regardless of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and a NT-proBNP concentration of ≥ 400 pg/L or a BNP concentration of ≥ 100 pg/L
Exclusion criteria
- Patient characteristics excluded from approved use of ReDS system: height \<155cm or \>190cm, BMI \<22 or \>39
- Patients discharged on inotropes, or with a left ventricular assist device or cardiac transplantation
- Congenital heart malformations or intra-thoracic mass that would affect right-lung anatomy
- End stage renal disease on hemodialysis
- Life expectancy \<12 months due to non-cardiac comorbidities
- Participating in another randomized study
Where
- New York, New York
Related conditions & keywords
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Data: ClinicalTrials.gov · synced Feb 21, 2021 · Source of record for eligibility and locations