Heart failure management has become increasingly complex over the past couple of decades, with new drugs and drug combinations, new uses for potentially life-saving implanted devices, and a more sophisticated appreciation of the ways that various comorbidities complicate a heart failure patient’s clinical status. These expanded dimensions of heart failure care resulted in the establishment in 2008 of a new secondary subspecialty, Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant Cardiology, aimed at training and certifying physicians in all the nuances of complex heart failure diagnostics and care.
But as the 2009 manifesto announcing this new heart failure subspecialty detailed, care for the vast majority of U.S. patients with heart failure remains in the hands of internal medicine primary care physicians (PCPs) and general cardiologists (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2009 Mar 10;53[10]:834-6). To some extent this is a manpower issue. The estimated number of Americans living with heart failure exceeds 5 million, a figure that dwarfs the very modest number of U.S. physicians and clinicians who are certified or self-identified heart failure specialists.
As of today, fewer than 1,000 U.S. physicians have received formal certification as heart failure subspecialists through the examination administered in 2010, 2012, and 2014, said Michele Blair, chief executive officer of the Heart Failure Society of America. A more liberal definition of a heart failure specialist might include the roughly 3,000 unique physicians (mostly cardiologists, but also some hospitalists and emergency physicians) who have recently attended an annual meeting of the HFSA, as well as the roughly 2,300 physician assistants and nurse practitioners who have shown a heart failure interest by coming to a recent HFSA meeting. But even these expanded estimates calculate out to about 1 clinician with a special interest in heart failure for each 1,000 heart failure patients, not a very reassuring ratio.
The burgeoning numbers of heart failure patients, compared with the relative scarcity of both heart failure experts and general cardiologists, raises issues of how primary-care internists best share this management responsibility. Recent interviews with several heart failure subspecialists and primary care internists provide some insight into how this division of labor is now playing out in routine U.S. practice. What often occurs is that primary care internists take exclusive responsibility for caring for heart failure patients until they feel they are getting in over their heads, at which time they’ll consult with a cardiology colleague or refer the patient to a cardiologist. That moment of recognition by the generalist – that the demands and complexity of the case exceed their comfort level – varies widely, with some PCPs referring patients as soon as heart failure symptoms appear while others stay comfortable as the primary care giver even as a patient’s disease deteriorates to a more advanced stage.
Heart failure specialists highlighted their reliance on PCPs to take an ongoing, active role even for patients with significantly advanced heart failure, as generalists are well suited to coordinating the multispecialty care that such patients usually require, with attention to their need for lifestyle modifications as well as management of their diabetes, sleep apnea, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, renal failure, and other comorbidities.
As Dr. Michael K. Ong, a primary care internist at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in an interview, his heart failure specialist colleague manages patients’ heart failure; “I manage [or refer] everything else not directly related to the heart failure.”
The most successful U.S. care models seem to be some variation on a team-care approach, in which physicians collaborate with pharmacists, nurses, rehabilitation specialists, and social workers as well as specialists, a team that would include and perhaps be led by either a primary care internist, a cardiologist, or a heart failure specialist but would also broadly include physicians able to deal with all the morbidity facets of heart failure. It’s a model that remains unavailable in many U.S. settings or is just starting to emerge, as fee-for-service coverage of patients gets replaced by population-management models that better accommodate the upfront financial demands of coordinated team care. It makes financial sense a few years down the road when improved patient outcomes result in cost savings.
Primary care and patients with symptomatic heart failure
The heart failure definitions and staging system established in 2001 by a guidelines panel of the American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association defined stage A heart failure as starting before a patient exhibits any heart failure symptoms (the classic ones include dyspnea, rales, and peripheral edema). The panel designated symptomatic heart failure patients as stage C. Patients without heart failure symptoms but with one or more risk factors (such as hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease) plus structural heart disease (such as cardiomyopathy or other forms of heart remodeling) were designated stage B. The panel said that people at stage A had one or more risk factors but no structural heart changes and no heart failure symptoms.