| Literature DB >> 29435789 |
Justin Gould1,2, Benjamin Sieniewicz3,4, Bradley Porter3,4, Baldeep Sidhu3,4, Christopher A Rinaldi3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We review the trials that have demonstrated potentially harmful effects from right ventricular (RV) apical pacing as well as reviewing the evidence of alternative RV pacing sites and cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) for patients who have heart failure and atrioventricular (AV) block. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Biventricular; CRT; Cardiac resynchronization therapy; Chronic right ventricular pacing; Heart failure
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29435789 PMCID: PMC5857555 DOI: 10.1007/s11897-018-0376-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Heart Fail Rep ISSN: 1546-9530
Randomized clinical trials comparing right ventricular pacing and cardiac resynchronization therapy. CRT vs. RV pacing trials in patients requiring bradycardia pacing
| Study |
| Inclusion criteria | Treatment | Follow-up | Endpoint | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAVE [ | 184 | Persistent AF and AV node ablation | CRT group ( | 6 months | LVEF | RV group reduction 6MWT distance ( |
| Ablate and pace in AF [ | 186 | Persistent/permanent AF | CRT ( | Median 20 months | Composite primary endpoint: death from HF, hospitalization for HF or worsening HF | Composite primary endpoint CRT 11% vs. RV group 26% ( |
| DAVID [ | 506 | Dual-chamber ICD indication | ICD VVI 40 bpm (back up pacing) ( | Median 8.4 months | Composite primary endpoint: death from HF or first hospitalization for HF | 1-year survival free of composite endpoint 83.9% patients with VVI-40 vs 73.3% for DDDR-70 (relative hazard, 1.61; 95% CI, 1.06–2.44) |
| MOST [ | 2010 | PPM for sinus node dysfunction | Single-chamber VVIR pacing ( | Median 33.1 months | HF hospitalization and AF | RV pacing DDDR mode > 40% time led to 2.6-fold increased risk HF hospitalization vs. lower % pacing (normal baseline QRS duration, despite preservation of AV synchrony, in SND patients) |
| PREVENT HF [ | 108 | Indication for pacing with LVEF > 50% and expected RV pacing of ≥ 80% | CRT ( | 12 months | LVEDV | No significant difference between CRT and RV pacing in LVEDV. No change in LVEF, LVESV, or HF events |
| PACE [ | 177 | LVEF ≥ 45% Standard bradycardia indications for pacing | CRT ( | Up to 2 years | LVESV | LVESV and LVEF deteriorated in RV apical group vs. no change CRT group, significant difference of 9.9% points between groups at 2-year follow-up ( |
| HOBIPACE [ | 30 | Permanent RV pacing indication LVEDD ≥ 60 mm LVEF ≤ 40% | Run-in phase then randomized to 3 months RV pacing then 3 months CRT or vice versa | 3 months with crossover to complimentary pacing mode | LVESV | Greater improvement in QoL, LVEF, maximal and submaximal exercise capacity CRT group vs. RV pacing group |
| COMBAT [ | 60 | Standard RV pacing indication for AV block LVEF ≤ 40%, NYHA II–IV | Group A: RV pacing, then CRT, then RV pacing | Minimum 3 months each mode | NYHA class and QoL score | In patients with systolic HF and AV block requiring permanent ventricular pacing, CRT was superior to RV pacing |
| BLOCK HF [ | 691 | AV block first to third HF NYHA I–III LVEF ≤ 50% | CRT ( | Mean 37 months | Composite primary endpoint: time to death any cause, urgent care visit for HF requiring IV Rx, or ≥ 15% increase LVESV index | Primary outcome 190/342 pts. (55.6%) RV pacing group, vs. 160/349 pts. (45.8%) in CRT group. CRT group significantly lower incidence primary outcome vs. RV pacing group (HR, 0.74; 95% credible interval, 0.60–0.90) |
| BioPace preliminary results [ | 1810 | Indication for ventricular PPM according to guidelines or anticipated high frequency of V pacing | CRT ( | Mean 5.6 years | Composite primary endpoint: first hospitalization due to heart failure or time to death | No statistically significant difference between CRT and RV pacing for composite primary endpoint (preliminary results) |
| Protect PACE [ | 240 | High-grade AV block requiring > 90% RV pacing with preserved LVEF > 50% | RV apical pacing ( | 2 years | Intra-patient change in LVEF | At 2 years, LVEF decreased in both RV apical (57 ± 9 to 55 ± 9%, |
HF heart failure, LVEDV left ventricular end-diastolic volume, CRT cardiac resynchronization therapy, RV right ventricular, AF atrial fibrillation, CI contraindication, SND sinus node dysfunction, QoL quality of life, AV atrioventricular, LVESV left ventricular end-systolic volume, HR hazard ratio
Fig. 1Freedom from composite primary endpoint (time to death from any cause, ≥ 15% increase in LVESV index, or an urgent care visit for heart failure that required intravenous therapy) in the BLOCK HF trial, copyright © 2013 Massachusetts Medical Society, reprinted with permission
Summary of 2016 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure relating to CRT and RV pacing in patients with high-degree AV Block. Adapted from 2016 ESC Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute and Chronic Heart Failure [61••]
| ESC recommendation | Class | Level |
|---|---|---|
| CRT is recommended over RV pacing for patients in sinus rhythm or AF, with HFrEF of any NYHA functional class, who have an indication for ventricular pacing and high-degree AV block, in order to reduce morbidity. | I | A |
| CRT is recommended over RV pacing in patients with HFrEF who require pacing with a high-degree of AV block. | I | A |
| Pacing modes that avoid inducing or worsening ventricular dyssynchrony should be considered for patients with HFrEF who require ventricular pacing without high-degree AV block. | IIa | C |
ESC European Society of Cardiology, CRT cardiac resynchronization therapy, HFrEF heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, NYHA New York Heart Association, AV atrioventricular, RV right ventricular