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A Modular Communicative Leadless Pacing-Defibrillator System.

Authors :
Knops RE
Lloyd MS
Roberts PR
Wright DJ
Boersma LVA
Doshi R
Friedman PA
Neuzil P
Blomström-Lundqvist C
Bongiorni MG
Burke MC
Gras D
Kutalek SP
Amin AK
Fu EY
Epstein LM
Tolosana JM
Callahan TD
Aasbo JD
Augostini R
Manyam H
Nair DG
Mondésert B
Su WW
Pepper C
Miller MA
Grammes J
Saleh K
Marquie C
Merchant FM
Cha YM
Cunnington C
Frankel DS
West J
Matznick E
Swackhamer B
Brisben AJ
Weinstock J
Stein KM
Reddy VY
Mont L
Source :
The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] 2024 May 18. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 18.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Background: The subcutaneous implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is associated with fewer lead-related complications than a transvenous ICD; however, the subcutaneous ICD cannot provide bradycardia and antitachycardia pacing. Whether a modular pacing-defibrillator system comprising a leadless pacemaker in wireless communication with a subcutaneous ICD to provide antitachycardia and bradycardia pacing is safe remains unknown.<br />Methods: We conducted a multinational, single-group study that enrolled patients at risk for sudden death from ventricular arrhythmias and followed them for 6 months after implantation of a modular pacemaker-defibrillator system. The safety end point was freedom from leadless pacemaker-related major complications, evaluated against a performance goal of 86%. The two primary performance end points were successful communication between the pacemaker and the ICD (performance goal, 88%) and a pacing threshold of up to 2.0 V at a 0.4-msec pulse width (performance goal, 80%).<br />Results: We enrolled 293 patients, 162 of whom were in the 6-month end-point cohort and 151 of whom completed the 6-month follow-up period. The mean age of the patients was 60 years, 16.7% were women, and the mean (±SD) left ventricular ejection fraction was 33.1±12.6%. The percentage of patients who were free from leadless pacemaker-related major complications was 97.5%, which exceeded the prespecified performance goal. Wireless-device communication was successful in 98.8% of communication tests, which exceeded the prespecified goal. Of 151 patients, 147 (97.4%) had pacing thresholds of 2.0 V or less, which exceeded the prespecified goal. The percentage of episodes of arrhythmia that were successfully terminated by antitachycardia pacing was 61.3%, and there were no episodes for which antitachycardia pacing was not delivered owing to communication failure. Of 162 patients, 8 died (4.9%); none of the deaths were deemed to be related to arrhythmias or the implantation procedure.<br />Conclusions: The leadless pacemaker in wireless communication with a subcutaneous ICD exceeded performance goals for freedom from major complications related to the leadless pacemaker, for communication between the leadless pacemaker and subcutaneous ICD, and for the percentage of patients with a pacing threshold up to 2.0 V at a 0.4-msec pulse width at 6 months. (Funded by Boston Scientific; MODULAR ATP ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04798768.).<br /> (Copyright © 2024 Massachusetts Medical Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1533-4406
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38767244
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2401807