1. A Randomized Study of Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Defibrillator Versus Dual-Chamber Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillator in Ischemic Cardiomyopathy With Narrow QRS
- Author
-
Raffaele Iengo, Francesco Solimene, Igor Diemberger, Maurizio Nastasi, Raimondo Calvanese, Michelangelo Canciello, Concetto La Rosa, Carmine Muto, Carmine Ciardiello, Raffaele Sangiuolo, Bernardino Tuccillo, Paolo Gallo, C. Muto, F. Solimene, P. Gallo, M. Nastasi, C. La Rosa, R. Calvanese, R. Iengo, M. Canciello, R. Sangiuolo, I. Diemberger, C. Ciardiello, and B. Tuccillo
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,dyssynchrony ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Cardiac resynchronization therapy ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Risk Assessment ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,law.invention ,Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy ,Electrocardiography ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,QRS complex ,narrow qr ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Prospective Studies ,Heart Failure ,Ischemic cardiomyopathy ,business.industry ,Cardiac Pacing, Artificial ,Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator ,medicine.disease ,Echocardiography, Doppler ,Defibrillators, Implantable ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,Heart failure ,Ventricular fibrillation ,cardiovascular system ,Tachycardia, Ventricular ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiomyopathies ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background— Current recommendations require a QRS duration of ≥120 ms as a condition for prescribing cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). This study was designed to test the hypothesis that patients with heart failure (HF) of ischemic origin, current indications for defibrillator implantation, and QRS Methods and Results— Patients with intraventricular dyssynchrony on echocardiography were randomly assigned to CRT or dual-chamber defibrillator implantation (CRT defibrillator and dual-chamber implantable cardioverter-defibrillator arm, respectively). The primary end point was the HF clinical composite response, which scores patients as improved, unchanged, or worsened. The secondary end point was the cumulative survival from HF hospitalization and HF death. An additional secondary end point was the composite of HF hospitalization, HF death, and spontaneous ventricular fibrillation. Twenty-three of 56 patients with CRT defibrillator showed an improvement in their clinical composite response at 1 year, compared with 9 of 55 patients with dual-chamber implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (41% versus 16%; P =0.004). After a median follow-up of 16 months, the CRT defibrillator arm showed a nonsignificant higher survival from HF hospitalization and HF death ( P =0.077), and a significantly higher survival from the combined end point of HF hospitalization, HF death, and spontaneous ventricular fibrillation ( P =0.028). Conclusions— In this comparison of CRT defibrillator and dual-chamber implantable cardioverter-defibrillator, CRT improved clinical status in some patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy, mild-to-moderate symptoms, narrow QRS duration, and mechanical dyssynchrony on echocardiography. Clinical Trial Registration— URL: http://clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT01577446.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF