Back to Search Start Over

Nocturnal respiratory rate predicts ICD benefit:a prospective, controlled, multicentre cohort study

Authors :
Dommasch, M. (Michael)
Steger, A. (Alexander)
Barthel, P. (Petra)
Huster, K. M. (Katharina M.)
Müller, A. (Alexander)
Sinnecker, D. (Daniel)
Laugwitz, K.-L. (Karl-Ludwig)
Penzel, T. (Thomas)
Lubinski, A. (Andrzej)
Flevari, P. (Panagiota)
Harden, M. (Markus)
Friede, T. (Tim)
Kääb, S. (Stefan)
Merkely, B. (Bela)
Sticherling, C. (Christian)
Willems, R. (Rik)
Huikuri, H. V. (Heikki V.)
Bauer, A. (Axel)
Malik, M. (Marek)
Zabel, M. (Markus)
Schmidt, G. (Georg)
T. E. (The EU-CERT-ICD investigators)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Background: Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) prevent sudden cardiac death. ICD implantation decisions are currently based on reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF≤35%). However, in some patients, the non-arrhythmic death risk predominates thus diminishing ICD-therapy benefits. Based on previous observations, we tested the hypothesis that compared to the others, patients with nocturnal respiratory rate (NRR) ≥18 breaths per minute (brpm) benefit less from prophylactic ICD implantations. Methods: This prospective cohort study was a pre-defined sub-study of EU-CERT-ICD trial conducted at 44 centers in 15 EU countries between May 12, 2014, and September 6, 2018. Patients with ischaemic or non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy were included if meeting primary prophylactic ICD implantation criteria. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality. NRR was assessed blindly from pre-implantation 24-hour Holters. Multivariable models and propensity stratification evaluated the interaction between NRR and the ICD mortality effect. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT0206419). Findings: Of the 2,247 EU-CERT-ICD patients, this sub-study included 1,971 with complete records. In 1,363 patients (61.7 (12) years; 244 women) an ICD was implanted; 608 patients (63.2 (12) years; 108 women) were treated conservatively. During a median 2.5-year follow-up, 202 (14.8%) and 95 (15.6%) patients died in the ICD and control groups, respectively. NRR statistically significantly interacted with the ICD mortality effect (p = 0.0070). While the 1,316 patients with NRR

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2423..867d361a0c8a6cb5d2f7b709bc002467