Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Feasibility of a combined mobile-health electrocardiographic and rapid diagnostic test screening for Chagas-related cardiac alterations

2020; Oxford University Press; Volume: 41; Issue: Supplement_2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/ehjci/ehaa946.3506

ISSN

1522-9645

Autores

Niccolò Maurizi, Carlo Fumagalli, Michele Spinicci, Enrico Guglielmi, Matteo Rosselli, H Gamboa, Roberto Vargas, M. Strohmeyer, Alessandro Bartoloni, Iacopo Olivotto,

Tópico(s)

Trypanosoma species research and implications

Resumo

Abstract Background Chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy (CChC) is the most common cause of death related to Chagas disease (CD), and it develops in 20–30% of infected individuals. However, access to both CD testing and basic cardiac care is often limited in rural deprived areas, hyperendemic for CD. Purpose To assess the feasibility of a combined mobile-health (m-Health) electrocardiographic (ECG) and rapid diagnostic test (RDT) screening for Chagas-related cardiac alterations in a remote rural village of the Bolivian Chaco, where a high prevalence of CChC is expected. Methods A representative sample of 140 healthy volunteers were consecutively enrolled in a rural Bolivian Community in February 2019. Demographic and clinical data were recorded through a standardized questionnaire. All patients performed an ECG by D-Heart, a validated low-cost hospital grade 8 and 12 lead smartphone portable ECG, and a serologic testing by Chagas Stat-Pak® (CSP). RDTs were read locally while ECGs were sent to a Cardiology clinic which transmitted reports within 24 hours from recording. Results Among 140 people (54 men, median age of 38 [23–54] years), 98 (70%, 95% CI 62.4–77.6) were positive for T. cruzi infection with CSP, with a linear, age-dependent, increasing trend (p<0.001). Overall, 25 individuals (18%) showed ECG abnormalities, compatible with CD. Prevalence of ECG abnormalities was significantly higher in T. cruzi infected individuals (22 vs 7%, p=0.032). None of the study participants had performed an ECG test prior to enrolment. ECG abnormalities included Bundle Branch Blocks (n=8), 1st Degree Atrioventricular blocks (n=3), rhythm disturbances (n=5), pathologic Q waves (n=2), fragmented QRS (n=5) and low QRS voltage (n=2). Twenty-two patients with a positive CSP testing and possible CD-related ECG abnormalities were recalled from Camiri Community and referred to Gutierrez Hospital for chest X-ray and treatment initiation. At multivariate analysis, positive CSP results (OR 4.75, 95% CI 1.08–20.96, p=0.039) and smoking habit (OR 4.20, 95% CI 1.18–14.92, p=0.027) were confirmed as independent predictors of ECG abnormalities. For 6-day screening for a community of 150 inhabitants, the overall start-up amount was projected to 4.82$/patient and to 8.23$/patient when operative costs (i.e. on-site nurse and healthcare assistant with remote physician on call) were included. Conclusions Combined D-Heart® ECG and RDTs screening proved a reliable and effective low-cost strategy to identify patients at high risk of disease and in need of further cardiologic assessment, in a rural, highly endemic environments of the Bolivian Chaco. Onsite and m-Health programmes should be encouraged to support early diagnosis of CD and CChC and provide access to targeted therapy to maximize treatment benefits prior to advanced cardiac involvement. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: None

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