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Abstract 20130: Permanent Pacemaker Implantation Following Heart Surgery: In-Hospital and Postoperative Retrospective Multicentre Evaluation in 1,156 Implants

Authors :
Michele De Bonis
Claudio Grossi
Andrea Colli
Francesco Paolo Tritto
Gino Gerosa
Fabio Barili
Lillà Amorese
Luigi Piazza
Roberto Scrofani
Francesco Rosato
Francesco Nicolini
Guglielmo Mario Actis Dato
Carlo De Vincentiis
Attilio Renzulli
Francesco Alamanni
Filibertio Serraino
Ugolino Livi
Gabriele Paglino
Enrico Vizzardi
Antonio Miceli
Tiziano Gherli
Roberto Lorusso
Giovanni Mariscalco
Alessandro Parolari
Sandro Sponga
Mattia Glauber
Carlo Antona
Paolo Della Bella
Domenico Paparella
Cesare Beghi
Marco Solinas
G. Troise
Emanuel Villa
Riccardo Casabona
Ezio Aimè
Source :
Circulation. 130
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2014.

Abstract

Introduction: Permanent pacemaker (PPM) implantation represents a potential event after cardiac surgery. However, comprehensive investigation of robust patient cohorts in this respect is unavailable. Hypothesis: A multicenter retrospective study was undertaken to assess in-hospital and long-term postoperative outcome of a large patient population undergoing PPM soon after cardiac surgery procedures. Methods: Among 94.693 patients submitted to cardiac surgery procedures in 16 centers from 2000 to 2013, there were 1.156 patients (1.2 %) with PPM implantation during hospitalization postoperatively. Preoperative, in-hospital, and follow-up data were collected with a common dataset and analyzed. Follow-up was performed by direct visit, and PPM dependency was assessed by electrocardiogram and pacemaker check during periodic examinations. The identification of potential predictors of PPM dependency at follow-up was evaluated with a multivariate logistic regression. Results: Patient mean age was 69 years (range 17-92 years) and 53.4% were male. Preoperative electrocardiogram showed first degree atrio/ventricular block in 11.0% of patients, left bundle branch block in 11.1%, right bundle branch block in 11.0%, and atrial fibrillation in 22.8%, respectively. Most of the patients had had isolated aortic valve replacement (25.8%). Pacemakers were implanted after a median of 11 days after surgery. At follow-up, 43.6% of the patients did not show a PPM dependency with restoration of sinus rhythm. The multivariate logistic regression demonstrated that only preoperative right bundle branch block (p-value 0.031) and mitral valve repair (p-value 0.032) were independent risk factor for PPM dependency at follow-up. Conclusions: More than 40% of patients with PPM implantation shortly after cardiac surgery show recovery of sinus rhythm at follow-up. Wide variability of strategies and PM implant timing are currently applied in routine practice. Refinement of current guidelines in this setting based also on predictors of permanent conduction defects postoperatively are warranted.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
130
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........aa80be14657f22441812a0bb8c9720c7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/circ.130.suppl_2.20130