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The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation ; 40(4, Supplement):S392, 2021.
Article in English | ScienceDirect | ID: covidwho-1141825

ABSTRACT

Purpose Left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) have been developed to support cardiocirculatory function in patients with advanced heart failure, who are refractory to optimal medical treatment. This created the need to identify a professional figure for dedicated management of LVAD patients. Methods In this report, we analyzed all the accesses of all consecutive adult LVAD recipients at our outpatient care unit and the impact of VAD coordinator clinical/technical assessment on patients global management, at the time of COVID-19 pandemic in the period January to August 2020 Results During the study period, 19 LVAD patients had overall 357 contacts with the clinic, for different combinations of: advanced driveline dressing (n=280), log file analysis and technical check-up (n=200), clinical visit (n=102), ramp test (n=17). In the majority of accesses, the patient was seen by the VAD coordinator only, (n=238;67%), mainly for driveline dressing, which was associated with technical check-ups in 89 cases.Overall, alarms were managed by technical check-ups and log file analyses in 14 cases (6 high priority alarms, 3 cases of high watt or low flow, and 5 cases of low-priority alarms). Ramp tests were performed during right heart catheterization, with contextual echocardiography performed by the VAD coordinator: in 11 out of 17 cases the ramp test led to medical therapy or LVAD settings optimization. Conclusion LVAD patients need frequent outpatients dedicated admissions for proper monitoring. The VAD coordinator is a key healthcare professional representing the main interface for LVAD patients, in support of physicians’ throughout the duration of mechanical support, to preserve optimal outcomes.

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