Back to Search Start Over

Magnitude of QRS duration reduction after biventricular pacing identifies responders to cardiac resynchronization therapy

Authors :
Attilio Pierantozzi
Antonio D'Onofrio
Laura Ajello
G. Savarese
Patrizia Pepi
Pietro Palmisano
Giuseppe Coppola
Antonio De Simone
Giampiero Maglia
Giosuè Mascioli
Giuseppe Arena
Giuseppe Stabile
T. Giovannini
Patrizia Carità
Luigi Padeletti
Gianfranco Ciaramitaro
Salvatore Ivan Caico
Domenico Pecora
Maurizio Malacrida
Antonio Rapacciuolo
Egle Corrado
Cinzia Nugara
Massimiliano Marini
Coppola, Giuseppe
Ciaramitaro, Gianfranco
Stabile, Giuseppe
DOnofrio, Antonio
Palmisano, Pietro
Carità, Patrizia
Mascioli, Giosuè
Pecora, Domenico
De Simone, Antonio
Marini, Massimiliano
Rapacciuolo, Antonio
Savarese, Gianluca
Maglia, Giampiero
Pepi, Patrizia
Padeletti, Luigi
Pierantozzi, Attilio
Arena, Giuseppe
Giovannini, Tiziana
Caico, Salvatore Ivan
Nugara, Cinzia
Ajello, Laura
Malacrida, Maurizio
Corrado, Egle
Donofrio, Antonio
Source :
International Journal of Cardiology. 221:450-455
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

Background Several studies have investigated the association between native QRS duration (QRSd) or QRS narrowing and response to biventricular pacing. However, their results have been conflicting. The aim of our study was to determine the association between the relative change in QRS narrowing index (QI) and clinical outcome and prognosis in patients who undergo cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) implantation. Methods and results We included 311 patients in whom a CRT device was implanted in accordance with current guidelines for CRT. On implantation, the native QRS, the QRSd and the QI during CRT were measured. After 6months, 220 (71%) patients showed a 10% reduction in LVESV. The median [25th–75th] QI was 14.3% [7.2–21.4] and was significantly related to reverse remodeling (r=+0.22; 95%CI: 0.11–0.32, p=0.0001). The cut-off value of QI that best predicted LV reverse remodeling after 6months of CRT was 12.5% (sensitivity=63.6%, specificity=57.1%, area under the curve=0.633, p=0.0002). The time to the event death or cardiovascular hospitalization was significantly longer among patients with QI>12.5% (log-rank test, p=0.0155), with a hazard ratio (HR) of 0.3 [95%CI: 0.11–0.78]. In the multivariate regression model adjusted for baseline parameters, a 10% increment in QI (HR=0.61[0.44–0.83], p=0.002) remained significantly associated with CRT response. Conclusions Patients with a larger decrease in QRSd after CRT initiation showed greater echocardiographic reverse remodeling and better outcome from death or cardiovascular hospitalization. QI is an easy-to-measure variable that could be used to predict CRT response at the time of pacing site selection or pacing configuration programming.

Details

ISSN :
01675273
Volume :
221
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6ef8b7be6144739cc7aa94d18296ff86
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2016.06.203