“Keeping the PCP at the center of the care team is critical, especially with the multiple comorbidities that HF patients can have, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, renal failure, sleep apnea, atrial fibrillation, and degenerative joint disease. Before you know it you have a half-dozen subspecialists involved in care and it can become uncoordinated. Keeping the PCP at the center of the team and providing the PCP with support from specialists as needed is critical,” said Dr. McKie.
Even for the most severe heart failure patients, PCPs can still play an important role by providing palliative care and dealing with end-of-life issues, specialists said.
Primary care and heart failure’s antecedents
The other, obvious time in heart failure’s severity spectrum for PCPs to take a very active role is with presymptomatic, stage A patients. Perhaps the only controversial element of this is whether such patients really have a form of heart failure and whether is it important to conceptualize heart failure this way.
The notion of stage A heart failure dates back to the 2001 edition of heart failure diagnosis and management recommendations issued by a panel organized by the ACC and AHA (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2001 Dec;38[7]:2101-13). The 2001 writing committee members said that they “decided to take a new approach to the classification of heart failure that emphasized both the evolution and progression of the disease.” They defined stage A patients as presymptomatic and without structural heart disease but with “conditions strongly associated with the development of heart failure,” specifically systemic hypertension, coronary artery disease, diabetes, a history of cardiotoxic drug therapy or alcohol abuse, a history of rheumatic fever, or a family history of cardiomyopathy.
When the ACC and AHA panel members next updated the heart failure recommendations in 2005, they seemed to take a rhetorical step back, saying that stage A and B “are clearly not heart failure but are an attempt to help healthcare providers identify patients early who are at risk for developing heart failure. Stage A and B patients are best defined as those with risk factors that clearly predispose toward the development of HF.” (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2005 Sept. 46[6]:1116-43) In 2005, the panel also streamlined the list of risk factors that identify stage A heart failure patients: hypertension, atherosclerotic disease, diabetes, obesity, metabolic syndrome, patients who have taken cardiotoxins, or patients with a family history of cardiomyopathy. The 2009 recommendation update left this definition of stage A heart failure unchanged, but in 2013 the most recent update devoted less attention to explaining the significance of the stage-A heart failure, although it clearly highlighted the importance of controlling hypertension, diabetes, and obesity as ways to prevent patients from developing symptomatic heart failure (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013 Oct 15;62[16]:e147-e239).
The subtle, official tweaking of the stage A (and B) heart failure concept during 2001-2013, as well establishment of stage A in the first place, seems to have left both PCPs and heart failure specialists unsure on exactly how to think about presymptomatic people with one or more of the prominent heart failure risk factors of hypertension, diabetes, and obesity. While they uniformly agree that identifying these risk factors and then treating them according to contemporary guidelines is hugely important for stopping or deferring the onset of heart failure, and they also agree that this aspect of patient care is clearly a core responsibility for PCPs, many also say that they don’t think of presymptomatic patients as having heart failure of any type despite the stage A designation on the books.
One exception is St. Vincent’s Dr. Walsh. “I think the writers of the 2001 heart failure guidelines had an inspired approach. Identifying patients with hypertension, diabetes, coronary artery disease, etc., as patients with heart failure has helped drive home the point that treatment and control of these diseases is crucial,” she said in an interview. “But I am not sure all physicians have adopted the concept. “Uncontrolled hypertension is prevalent, and not viewed by all as resulting in heart failure down the road. Diabetes and hypertension are very important risk factors for the development of heart failure in women,” she added. “I’m especially diligent in ensuring that women with one or both of these diseases get treated aggressively.”
Highlighting specifically the fundamental role that uncontrolled hypertension plays in causing heart failure, the University of Pennsylvania’s Dr. Jessup estimated that controlling hypertension throughout the U.S. population could probably cut heart failure incidence in half.
Others draw a sharper contrast between the risk factor stage and the symptomatic stages of heart failure, though they all agree on the importance of risk factor management by PCPs. “Hypertension does not mean that a patient has heart failure; it means they have a risk factor for heart failure and the patient is in the prevention stage,” said the NHLBI’s Dr. Shah. ”The most important role for PCPs is to identify the risk factors and prevent development of [symptomatic] heart failure. This is where PCPs are critically important because patients present to them at the early stages.”