Abstract

Acute heart failure 30-day readmissions are associated with increased patient morbidity and mortality. Our aim is to identify systemic factors that can reduce heart failure readmissions, including the implementation of a heart failure care coordination team. We assessed the hypothesis that individualized post-discharge education and summary from the heart failure care coordination team will reduce 30-day heart failure readmissions.This retrospective study included 213 patients, 18 years and older admitted with NYHA Class II-IV and ACC/AHA Stage B-D heart failure exacerbations from July 2021- March 2022, at a community hospital. Collected variables included demographics, medical comorbidities, labs, echocardiographic findings, inpatient orders, LACE index score, discharge follow-up, receipt of an after-visit summary, length of stay, and 30-day readmission. Descriptive data was summarized as counts and percentages for categorical data, and mean or median for continuous data. Between-group parametric data means were compared by calculating the t-test for independent variables, or medians using the Mann-Whitney U test for data that were nonparametric. Categorical variables were compared by calculating the chi-square test for association or Fisher’s exact test, as appropriate. The primary study objective was tested using Logistic regression modeling. Throughout this study, a p-value ≤0.05 (two-tail) was considered statistically significant. The medical records of all available reduced treatment plan patients were compared to preserved treatment plan patients in approximately equal numbers. Pair-wise t-tests required the greatest number of subjects. Using the conventional power level of 80%, a two-tailed alpha of 0.05, and assuming a medium effect size, it was estimated that this comparison will require at least 114 subjects. In this study, 189 of 213 patients were reached by the heart failure care coordination team. 49/189 were readmitted in 30 days and 140/189 were not. For the readmission group, the percentage of patients who were CKD Stage 3 or 4 (39.4%, 28 of 71) was higher than those who were not (21.1%, 30 of 142) with a p-value of 0.005. The percentage of patients who had discharge BNP checked (39.1%, 18 of 46) was higher than those who were not (24.1%, 40 of 166) with a p-value of 0.043. A higher LACE index score was associated with readmission as compared to a lower score, with a p-value of < 0.001. In conclusion, presence of CKD stage 3 or 4, discharge BNP, and a higher LACE-index score were associated with 30-day heart failure readmission. Counterintuitively, the heart failure care coordination team did not have an impact on this endpoint, contrary to our hypothesis. Future studies with a larger sample size and focus on the outpatient care team efforts may be helpful in elucidating the team's potential in preventing heart failure readmission.

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