BACKGROUND: The primary objectives of this study were to compare the implantation course of triple-site (double left-single right) and conventional cardiac resynchronization devices. The secondary target was to assess mid-term outcomes of both types of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). METHODS:Fifty-four patients with NYHA classes III-IV, left ventricular EF<or=35% and QRS>or=120 ms were included; 27 receivedtriple-site pacemakers (TRIV group), 27 conventional CRT devices (BIV group). Procedural course, clinical data, QRS duration, echocardiographic parameters, peak oxygen consumption (VO2max) and 6-minute walking distance (6MWD) were screened for inter-group differences. RESULTS:Procedure duration was higher in TRIV than in BIV group (197.6 vs. 137.6 min, P<0.001), fluoroscopy exposure and complication-rates were similar. After 3 months of CRT, triple-site pacing was associated with a more significant (P<0.05) NYHA class reduction (by 1.4 vs. 1.0 class, respectively), increase in VO(2) max (2.9 vs. 1.1 mL/kg/min) and 6MWD (98.7 vs. 51.6 m) than conventional CRT. A higher EF and more improved intraventricular synchrony were observed in the TRIV than in the BIV group. The response rate in the TRIV group was 96.3% vs. 62.9% in the conventional group (P=0.002). Triple-site stimulation was an independent predictor of response to CRT (adjusted odds ratio 26.4, P=0.01). CONCLUSIONS:Triple-site resynchronization appears to be more beneficial than conventional CRT. Upgrade to triple-site CRT may be considered in non-responders to standard resynchronization.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: The primary objectives of this study were to compare the implantation course of triple-site (double left-single right) and conventional cardiac resynchronization devices. The secondary target was to assess mid-term outcomes of both types of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). METHODS: Fifty-four patients with NYHA classes III-IV, left ventricular EF<or=35% and QRS>or=120 ms were included; 27 received triple-site pacemakers (TRIV group), 27 conventional CRT devices (BIV group). Procedural course, clinical data, QRS duration, echocardiographic parameters, peak oxygen consumption (VO2max) and 6-minute walking distance (6MWD) were screened for inter-group differences. RESULTS: Procedure duration was higher in TRIV than in BIV group (197.6 vs. 137.6 min, P<0.001), fluoroscopy exposure and complication-rates were similar. After 3 months of CRT, triple-site pacing was associated with a more significant (P<0.05) NYHA class reduction (by 1.4 vs. 1.0 class, respectively), increase in VO(2) max (2.9 vs. 1.1 mL/kg/min) and 6MWD (98.7 vs. 51.6 m) than conventional CRT. A higher EF and more improved intraventricular synchrony were observed in the TRIV than in the BIV group. The response rate in the TRIV group was 96.3% vs. 62.9% in the conventional group (P=0.002). Triple-site stimulation was an independent predictor of response to CRT (adjusted odds ratio 26.4, P=0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Triple-site resynchronization appears to be more beneficial than conventional CRT. Upgrade to triple-site CRT may be considered in non-responders to standard resynchronization.
Authors: Antonios P Antoniadis; Ben Sieniewicz; Justin Gould; Bradley Porter; Jessica Webb; Simon Claridge; Jonathan M Behar; Christopher Aldo Rinaldi Journal: Curr Heart Fail Rep Date: 2017-10
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Authors: Antonios P Antoniadis; Jonathan M Behar; Simon Claridge; Tom Jackson; Manav Sohal; Christopher Aldo Rinaldi Journal: Curr Cardiol Rep Date: 2016-07 Impact factor: 2.931
Authors: Mark K Elliott; Vishal Mehta; Nadeev Wijesuriya; Baldeep S Sidhu; Justin Gould; Steven Niederer; Christopher A Rinaldi Journal: Eur Heart J Open Date: 2022-02-26