| Literature DB >> 25957994 |
Yan Jin1, Qi Zhang2, Jia-Liang Mao2, Ben He2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heart failure (HF) is a debilitating condition that affects millions of people worldwide. One means of treating HF is cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). Recently, several studies have examined the use of echocardiography (ECHO) in the optimization of left ventricular (LV) lead placement to increase the response to CRT. The objective of this study was to synthesize the available data on the comparative efficacy of image-guided and standard CRT.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25957994 PMCID: PMC4443661 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-015-0034-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1A flow diagram of the process for study selection
Summary of basic characteristics of the studies included in the meta-analysis
| First author (year) | Study design (trial name) | CRT intervention | Follow-up time | Patient no. | Age (yrs) | Gender, male (%) | NYHA grade | LVEF (%) | QRS width (ms) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saba (2013) [ | RCT (STARTER) | Image-guided | 1.8 ± 1.3 yrs | 110 | 66 ± 11 | 70 % | II/III/IV: 16/64/20a | 26 ± 6 | 157 ± 27 |
| Standardb | 77 | 67 ± 13 | 78 % | II/III/IV: 8/71/21a | 26 ± 7 | 162 ± 27 | |||
| Khan (2012) [ | RCT (TARGET) | Image-guided | 2 yrs | 110 | 72 (65–76) | 77 % | III/IV: 95/15c | 23 ± 6 | 157 (148–170) |
| Standardb | 110 | 72 (64–80) | 80 % | III/IV: 93/17c | 23 ± 7 | 159 (146–170) | |||
| Bai (2011) [ | Prospective study | Image-guided | 6 mths | 50 | 66 ± 11 | 60 % | III or IV: 3.10 ± 0.30d | 23 ± 7 | 153 ± 23 |
| Standardb | 54 | 64 ± 9 | 74 % | III or IV: 3.07 ± 0.26d | 26 ± 6 | 155 ± 29 |
Abbreviations: CRT cardiac resynchronization therapy, NYHA New York Heart Association, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, RCT randomized control trials, yrs years, mths months, no number
Data are presented as mean ± SD or median (inter-quartile range), unless noted otherwise. bStandard procedures means that empiric placement of LV leads was only facilitated by coronary venography, with a preference for a lateral, posterior, or posterolateral region as an implantation site. adata are presented as percentage; cdata are presented as counts; ddata are presented as mean ± SD
Summary of outcomes of the included studies
| First author (year) | CRT intervention | Concordance of LV lead to latest site of activation, % | OR for CRT response (95 % CI) | CRT response, count (%) | LVESV (ml), mean ± SD | Change from baseline | LVEF (%), mean ± SD | All-cause mortality, count (%) | HF-related hospitalization, count (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Post treatment | Baseline | Post treatment | Change from baseline | ||||||||
| Saba (2013) [ | Image-guided | Exact/adjacent: | NR | 50 (57 %) | 140 ± 59 | NR | −30 ± 29 (%)a | 26 ± 6 | 38 ± 12.8b | 12 ± 11 | 15 (13.6 %) | 16 (14.5 %) |
| 30/NR | ||||||||||||
| Exact or adjacent: 85 | ||||||||||||
| Remote: 15 | ||||||||||||
| Standard | Exact/adjacent: | 22 (35 %) | 144 ± 63 | NR | −20 ± 25 (%)a | 26 ± 7 | 35 ± 11.45b | 9 ± 10 | 15 (19.5 %) | 21 (27.3 %) | ||
| 12/NR | ||||||||||||
| Exact or adjacent: 66 | ||||||||||||
| Remote: 33 | ||||||||||||
| Khan (2012) [ | Image-guided | Exact/adjacent: | 1.92 (1.08, 3.39) | 72 (70 %) | 157 ± 56 | 111 ± 43 | −46 ± 33 (ml) | 23 ± 6 | 31 ± 9 | 8 ± 7 | 22 (10 %) | 18 (8 %) |
| 63/26 | ||||||||||||
| Exact or adjacent: NR | ||||||||||||
| Remote: 10 | ||||||||||||
| Standard | Exact/adjacent: | 1.0 (reference) | 57 (55 %) | 154 ± 52 | 128 ± 50 | −26 ± 23 (ml) | 23 ± 7 | 28 ± 10 | 5 ± 8 | |||
| 47/29 | ||||||||||||
| Exact or adjacent: NR | ||||||||||||
| Remote: 25 | ||||||||||||
| Bai (2011) [ | Image-guided | NR | 2.68 (1.08-6.65)c | 41 (82 %) | 172 ± 65 | 129 ± 65 | −43 ± 65 (ml) | 23 ± 7 | 34 ± 10 | 11 ± 8.89d | NR | NR |
| Standard | NR | 1.0 (reference) | 34 (63 %) | 159 ± 74 | 141 ± 82 | −18 ± 78 (ml) | 26 ± 6 | 32 ± 9 | 6 ± 7.94d | NR | NR | |
Abbreviations: CRT cardiac resynchronization therapy, LV left ventricular, EF ejection fraction, LVESV left ventricular end-systolic volume, ml milliliters, SD standard deviation, NR not reported, HF heart failure
aRepresented as a relative change before and after treatment
bData were estimated according to the reported results of baseline and change from baseline; n = 87 for the image-guided group and n = 62 for the standard group
cWith adjustment for clinical characteristics
dData were estimated according to the reported LVEF at baseline and post-treatment
Fig. 2A Forest plot showing the results of a meta-analysis of CRT response rate (A) and the corresponding sensitivity-analysis (B) for the patients who received image-guided or standard CRT. (A) The pooled estimate favors image-guided CRT. (B) The pooled estimates of all 3 studies and each pair are similar. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CRT, cardiac resynchronization therapy; Lower limit, lower bound of the 95 % CI; Upper limit, upper bound of the 95 % CI
Fig. 3A Forest plot showing the results of a meta-analysis of post-treatment change in LVEF (A) and the corresponding sensitivity-analysis (B) for the patients who received image-guided or standard CRT. (A) The pooled estimate favors image-guided CRT. (B) The pooled estimates of all 3 studies and each pair are similar. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CRT, cardiac resynchronization therapy; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; Lower limit, lower bound of the 95 % CI; Upper limit, upper bound of the 95 % CI
Fig. 4A Forest plot showing the results of a meta-analysis of post-treatment change in LVESV (in milliliters) for the patients who received image-guided or standard CRT. The pooled estimate favors image-guided CRT. Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CRT, cardiac resynchronization therapy; LVESV, left ventricular end-systolic volume; Lower limit, lower bound of the 95 % CI; Upper limit, upper bound of the 95 % CI
Quality assessment of the included studies
| First author (year) | Selection bias (random sequence generation) | Selection bias (allocation concealment) | Performance bias (blinding of participants and personnel) | Detection bias (blinding of outcome assessment) | Attrition bias (incomplete outcome data) | Reporting bias (selective reporting) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saba (2013) [ | Y | Unclear | Y | Unclear | Y | Y |
| Khan (2012) [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Bai (2011) [ | N | N | Unclear | Y | Y | Y |
Y low risk of bias, N high risk of bias, Unclear insufficient data for judgment