Modeling defibrillation benefit for survival among cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillator recipients

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Abstract

Background: Patients with heart failure having a low expected probability of arrhythmic death may not benefit from implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs). Objective: The objective was to validate models to identify cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) candidates who may not require CRT devices with ICD functionality. Methods: Heart failure (HF) patients with CRT-Ds and non-CRT ICDs from the National Cardiovascular Data Registry and others with no device from 3 separate registries and 3 heart failure trials were analyzed using multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression for survival with the Seattle Heart Failure Model (SHFM; estimates overall mortality) and the Seattle Proportional Risk Model (SPRM; estimates proportional risk of arrhythmic death). Results: Among 60,185 patients (age 68.6 ± 11.3 years, 31.9% female) meeting CRT-D criteria, 38,348 had CRT-Ds, 11,389 had non-CRT ICDs, and 10,448 had no device. CRT-D patients had a prominent adjusted survival benefit (HR 0.52, 95% CI 0.50-0.55, P median had substantially more ICD-attributable benefit (absolute risk reduction of 2.6%/year combined; P < .0001). Conclusions: The SPRM and SHFM identified a quarter of real-world, primary prevention CRT-D patients with minimal benefit from ICD functionality. Further studies to evaluate CRT pacemakers in these low-risk CRT candidates are indicated.

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Bilchick, K. C., Wang, Y., Curtis, J. P., Cheng, A., Dharmarajan, K., Shadman, R., … Levy, W. C. (2020). Modeling defibrillation benefit for survival among cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillator recipients. American Heart Journal, 222, 93–104. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ahj.2019.12.017

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