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Atrioventricular optimization in cardiac resynchronization therapy with quadripolar leads: should we optimize every pacing configuration including multi-point pacing?

Authors :
Everdingen, Wouter M van
Zweerink, Alwin
Salden, Odette A E
Cramer, Maarten J
Doevendans, Pieter A
Rossum, Albert C van
Prinzen, Frits W
Vernooy, Kevin
Allaart, Cornelis P
Meine, Mathias
van Everdingen, Wouter M
van Rossum, Albert C
Source :
EP: Europace; Jan2019, Vol. 21 Issue 1, pe11-e19, 9p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

<bold>Aims: </bold>This study aims to define an atrioventricular (AV) delay optimization method for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) with a quadripolar left ventricular (LV) lead based on intrinsic conduction intervals.<bold>Methods and Results: </bold>Heart failure patients with a left bundle branch block underwent CRT implantation with a quadripolar LV lead. Invasive LV pressure-volume loops were recorded during four biventricular and three multi-point pacing (MPP) settings, using four patient-specific paced AV delays. Haemodynamic response was defined as change in stroke work (Δ%SW) compared to intrinsic rhythm and was related to the following conduction intervals: right atrial pacing to right ventricular sensing interval (RAp-RVs), Q to LV sensing interval normalized to QRS duration (QLV/QRSd), PR-interval, and P-wave duration. In 44 patients, the largest Δ%SW (104 ± 76%) occurred at a paced AV delay of 128 ± 32 ms, at 47 ± 9% of RAp-RVs. Optimal AV delay of biventricular pacing (126 ± 26 ms) did not differ from MPP (126 ± 21 ms, P = 0.29). Intra-class correlation coefficient between optimal AV delays of different pacing configurations was 0.64 (0.45-0.78, P < 0.001). Although not statistically significant, Δ%SW at 50% of RAp-RVs (98 ± 74%) was closer to the maximal achievable Δ%SW increase than a fixed interval of 120 ms (96 ± 73%, P = 0.60). RAp-RVs, QLV/QRSd, PR interval, and P-wave duration were associated with the optimal AV delay in univariate analysis, but only RAp-RVs remained significantly associated in multivariate analysis (R = 0.69).<bold>Conclusion: </bold>The AV delay that provides highest haemodynamic response is similar for various LV pacing configurations and for MPP. An AV delay ∼50% of RAp-RVs creates an acute haemodynamic response close to the maximal patient-specific response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10995129
Volume :
21
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
EP: Europace
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134066416
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/europace/euy138