Heart Brain Clinic: An Integrated Approach to Stroke Care.

Background and Objectives Multidisciplinary clinics have been shown to improve care. Patients with patent foramen ovale (PFO)-associated stroke need evaluation by cardiology and neurology specialists. We report our experience creating a multidisciplinary Structural Heart Brain Clinic (HBC) with a focus on patients with PFO-associated stroke. Methods Demographic and clinical data were retrospectively collected for patients with PFO-associated ischemic stroke. Patients with PFO-associated stroke were divided into a standard care group and Heart Brain Clinic group for analysis. Outcome measures included time from stroke to PFO closure and number of clinic visits before decision regarding closure. Nonparametric analysis evaluated differences in median time to visit and clinical decision, while the chi square analysis compared differences in categorical variables between groups. Results From February 2017 to December 2021, 120 patients were evaluated for PFO-associated stroke. The Structural HBC began in 12/2018 with coordination between Departments of Neurology and Cardiology. For this analysis, 41 patients were considered in the standard care group and 79 patients in the HBC group. During data analysis, 107 patients had received recommendations about PFO closure. HBC patients required fewer clinic visits (p = 0.001) before decision about closure; however, among patients who underwent PFO closure, there was no significant difference in weeks from stroke to PFO closure. Clinicians were more likely to recommend against PFO closure among patients seen in HBC compared with those seen in standard care (p = 0.021). Discussion Our data demonstrate that a multidisciplinary, patient-centered approach to management of patients with PFO-associated ischemic stroke is feasible and may improve the quality of care in this younger patient population. The difference in recommendation to not pursue PFO closure between groups may reflect selection and referral bias. Additional work is needed to determine whether this approach improves other aspects of care and outcomes.

[1]  J. Carroll,et al.  Proposal for Updated Nomenclature and Classification of Potential Causative Mechanism in Patent Foramen Ovale-Associated Stroke. , 2020, JAMA neurology.

[2]  B. van der Werf,et al.  Multidisciplinary clinics reduce treatment costs and improve patient outcomes in diabetic foot disease. , 2019, Journal of vascular surgery.

[3]  W. Qureshi,et al.  Updated meta-analysis of closure of patent foramen ovale versus medical therapy after cryptogenic stroke. , 2019, Cardiovascular revascularization medicine : including molecular interventions.

[4]  J. Carroll,et al.  Cost-effectiveness of percutaneous patent foramen ovale closure as secondary stroke prevention , 2018, Journal of medical economics.

[5]  J. Graff‐Radford,et al.  The Heart-Brain Team-Towards Optimal Team-Based Coordinated Care. , 2018, JAMA cardiology.

[6]  Ashutosh Kumar Singh,et al.  Global, regional, and national incidence, prevalence, and years lived with disability for 310 diseases and injuries, 1990–2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015 , 2016, Lancet.

[7]  B. Khandheria,et al.  How to Understand Patent Foramen Ovale Clinical Significance: Part I , 2014, Journal of cardiovascular echography.

[8]  E. Yordan,et al.  Multidisciplinary care in the oncology setting: historical perspective and data from lung and gynecology multidisciplinary clinics. , 2010, Journal of oncology practice.

[9]  S. Grosse,et al.  Models of Comprehensive Multidisciplinary Care for Individuals in the United States With Genetic Disorders , 2009, Pediatrics.

[10]  N. Nanda,et al.  RESEARCH FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM: Patent Foramen Ovale in a Large Population of Ischemic Stroke Patients: Diagnosis, Age Distribution, Gender, and Race , 2007, Echocardiography.

[11]  B. Rabinowitz Interdisciplinary breast cancer care: declaring and improving the standard. , 2004, Oncology.

[12]  O. Hardiman,et al.  Effect of a multidisciplinary amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) clinic on ALS survival: a population based study, 1996–2000 , 2003, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[13]  S. Windecker,et al.  Outcome of patients with cryptogenic stroke and patent foramen ovale , 2002, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[14]  M. Bance,et al.  Experience from a multidisciplinary "dizzy" clinic. , 2000, The American journal of otology.