1. Altered circadian rhythmicity of the QT interval predicts mortality in a large real-world academic hospital population
- Author
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Rutger R. van de Leur, Bastiaan C. du Pré, Markella I. Printezi, Rutger J. Hassink, Pieter A. Doevendans, René van Es, and Linda W. van Laake
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Electrocardiography ,QT interval ,Circadian rhythm ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Objective and rationale: Small studies have shown that the QT interval follows a circadian rhythm. This finding has never been confirmed in a large real-world hospital population and the clinical meaning of disrupted rhythmicity remains unknown. Methods: In this cohort study, all consecutive adult patients with at least one 12-lead ECG acquired between 1991 and 2021 were considered. Sinus rhythm ECGs without QRS conduction or ST-segment abnormalities obtained at the wards or outpatient clinic were included. The QT interval was corrected for age, sex and ventricular rate in a personalized manner. Subsequently, the added value of a 24-h sinusoid of time-of-day was evaluated. An individual 24-h QT interval amplitude was obtained from the model in a subset with patients that had at least 3 ECGs of which one during the night before their last ECG. The association of this individual QT interval with all-cause mortality was assessed using a left-truncated Cox regression model. Results: The baseline QT correction model was fitted using 237,555 ECGs of 100,644 patients. The personalized corrected QT interval had no relationship with ventricular rate (r = −0.008). Adding the 24-h sinusoidal to the baseline model resulted in a significantly better fit (p
- Published
- 2025
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