| Literature DB >> 22386040 |
Lynn V Doering1, Kathleen Hickey, David Pickham, Belinda Chen, Barbara J Drew.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute allograft rejection is a major cause of early mortality in the first year after heart transplantation in adults. Although endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) is not a perfect "gold standard" for a correct diagnosis of acute allograft rejection, it is considered the best available test and thus, is the current standard practice. Unfortunately, EMB is an invasive and costly procedure that is not without risk. Recent evidence suggests that acute allograft rejection causes delays in ventricular repolarization and thereby increases the cellular action potential duration resulting in a longer QT interval on the electrocardiogram (ECG). No prospective study to date has investigated whether such increases in the QT interval could provide early detection of acute allograft rejection. Therefore, in the Novel Evaluation With Home Electrocardiogram And Remote Transmission (NEW HEART) study, we plan to investigate the potential benefit of daily home QT interval monitoring to predict acute allograft rejection. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22386040 PMCID: PMC3323456 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2261-12-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Human Studies on QT Interval Prolongation after Heart Transplantation
| # Subjects Author/Yr | Study Design | Major Findings | Study Limitations | Implications for NEW HEART Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N = 65 Richartz et al. 1998 [ | Prospective; Rejection during in-hospital period | 1. Mean QTC = 449 ± 2 ms without rejection; 517 ± 11 ms with rejection ( | 1. Only observed rejection during hospitalization for transplant surgery 2. Analyzed only 3 ECGs per subject 3. ECG analyzers not blinded from clinical information about rejection | An increase in the QT interval predicts acute allograft rejection |
| N = 52 Kolasa et al. 2005 [ | Retrospective; Long-term mortality over 7 yrs | Poorer survival over 7 yrs in subjects who had a > 10 ms per year change in their QTC interval on their annual ECG | 1. Link to rejection not studied 2. Analyzed only one ECG per year | As little as a 10 ms change in the QT interval is linked to mortality |
| N = 200 Tenderich et al. 2006 [ | Retrospective; Rejection during first 3 months | > 25 ms increase in QTC interval predicted acute allograft rejection with sensitivity, 77%; specificity, 96%. | 1. Only analyzed 2 ECGs per subject 2. ECG analyzers not blinded from clinical information about rejection | Increase in QT interval predicts acute rejection during the period of interest |
| N = 587 Vrtovec et al. 2006 [ | Retrospective; Long-term mortality up to 17 yrs | 1. Patients with ≥ 10% increase in QTC interval between 1st and 2nd year post-transplant had 6.86 times higher risk of dying.2. ≥ 10% increase in QTC was the only independent predictor of long- term mortality on multivariate analysis 3. Trend was a decreasing QTC over the yrs suggesting sympathetic reinnervation | 1. Link to rejection not studied 2. Analyzed only one ECG per year | An increase in the QT interval is linked to mortality |
| N = 71 Vrtovec et al. 2008 [ | Retrospective; 1- year all-cause & SCD mortality in subjects with severe acute rejection | 1. QTC was longer in SCD group than in survivors (475 ± 57 versus 437 ± 36 ms; | 1. Limited to just patients with severe rejection; unable to tell whether increased QT interval could predict earlier, milder forms of rejection 2. Analyzed just 2 ECGs per subject (one at baseline 7 days after surgery, second at time of rejection) | An increase in the QT interval is linked to mortality |
ms = millisecond; SCD = sudden cardiac death; QTc = QT interval corrected for heart rate
Figure 1HeartView™ Device and Transmission System.
Figure 2Measurement of QT Interval. A tangent is drawn to the steepest slope of the last limb of the T wave; the end of the T wave is the intersection of this tangent with the baseline.
Variable definitions for statistical analysis
| Variable | Definition | Type of Variable |
|---|---|---|
| ΔQTC | ≥ +25 ms increase in QTC interval from previous day lasting 3 consecutive days [ | Continuous (expected range, 10-100 ms) |
| Acute allograft rejection | EMB category 1R or 2R or 3R with confirmation by | Categorical; dichotomous (yes/no) No = 0; Yes = 1R or 2R or 3R |
| Days to rejection | Number of days from first positive ECG criterion to mild, moderate, or severe rejection diagnosis. If the ECG criterion follows rejection, a negative # of days | Continuous (expected range -365 to +365) |
| Acute rejection severity | EMB category: 1R (mild), 2R (moderate), 3R (severe) | Categorical |
| Cardiac rhythm | Sinus rhythm, atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, junctional rhythm | Categorical |
| Heart rate | Heart rate per minute calculated from 30 s rhythm strip | Continuous (expected range, 60-120) |
| P wave duration | Interval from beginning to end of P wave in ms (measure of intra-atrial conduction delay) | Continuous (expected range, 70-126 ms) |
| QRS duration | Interval from beginning to end of the QRS waveform | Continuous (expected range, 72-160 ms) |
| PR interval | Interval from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the QRS complex measured in ms. PR interval > 200 ms indicates an abnormal delay of conduction (1st degree AV block). | Continuous (expected range, 112-240 ms) |
| QRS amplitude | Height of QRS waveform in μV | Continuous (expected range, 500-1000 μV |
| TPEAK - TEND | Interval from the peak of the T wave (or nadir in inverted T waves) to the end of the T wave in ms. Prolonged TPEAK -TEND indicates heterogeneity of repolarization and risk for arrhythmia | Continuous (expected range, 112-240 ms) |
Definitions of Universal Proportions
| Criterion | Definition |
|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Proportion of those with acute rejection who are positive for the ECG criterion |
| Specificity | Proportion of those without rejection who are negative for the ECG criterion |
| Positive Predictive Value | Proportion of patients with positive ECG criterion who have rejection |
| Negative Predictive Value | Proportion of patients with negative ECG criterion who do not have rejection |
| Predictive Accuracy | |