Human/Machine Interface: What the HeartMate 3 ® Device Tells Us About the Future
International Consortium of Circulatory Assist Clinicians
Summary
Durable left ventricular assist devices (dLVAD) have been increasingly utilized since the mid to late 1990s, with an uptick of utility starting in 2010 following expanded indications for therapy to not only include a bridge to transplantation strategy, but also for those individuals who suffer from advanced heart failure (HF) and do not qualify for cardiac transplantation. Despite the decreasing size of the newest generation devices leading to a lessened occurrence of adverse events, bleeding and infection still remain a concern for clinicians, as well as a general lack of predictability towards adverse events in individuals with a dLVAD in place. There is a lack of description in the literature currently, regarding the interface between what the pump data provides and what is seen in clinical practice. There also is little known about the effects of what is provided in the pump data, in correlation to quality-of-life following dLVAD implantation. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to prospectively analyze normal and abnormal pump data through pump operations such as suction events, low flow alarms as well as other adventitious alarms, PI events and power cable disconnects greater than 20 seconds, from the HeartMate 3 ® dLVAD in order to clinically correlate this data to quality of life, frailty and other various medical conditions and adverse events as defined by the Interagency Registry for Mechanically Assisted Circulatory Support (Intermacs). This will be achieved through two aims: 1) Evaluate the effectiveness of dLVAD pump operations data on clinical practice application (quality of life, frailty and various medical conditions, and adverse events such as GIB, RHF, infection, hypertension, arrhythmias and stroke); and 2) Evaluate correlations and relationships of longitudinal normal and abnormal dLVAD pump operations data, to demographic and clinical variables. This study is the first study to evaluate HeartMate 3 ® dLVAD pump operations data over time for effectiveness in the clinical practice.
Description
Specific Aims The prevalence of heart failure (HF), a chronic medical condition, continues to grow exponentially, affecting more than 26 million globally. There are more than 6.5 million in the United States alone with HF. Roughly 600,000 individuals suffer from end-stage HF, defined as advanced structural changes to the heart, significantly worsening HF symptoms despite medical therapy, and generally more than 50% 1-year mortality risk.There are limited treatment options once traditional guideline driven medical therapy fails in those advancing to end-stage HF. Limited treatment options at th…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–100 years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * 18 years of age or older * Scheduled Heartmate 3 ® dLVAD implantation Exclusion Criteria: * \<18 years of age * Scheduled for dLVAD that is NOT a Heartmate 3 (R) device
Interventions
- DeviceHeartMate 3 (R) left ventricular assist device
No direct intervention; this is prospective study analysis of pump data from the HeartMate 3 (R) left ventricular assist device with clinical correlation to a multitude of variables and conditions we see clinically
Locations (7)
- UCSFSan Francisco, California
- University of FloridaGainesville, Florida
- University of ChicagoChicago, Illinois
- University of Kansas Medical CenterKansas City, Kansas
- Mayo Clinic-RochesterRochester, Minnesota
- MUSCCharleston, South Carolina