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Impact of right ventricular pacing site on the subcutaneous ICD sensing - a step towards personalised device therapy?

Impact of right ventricular pacing site on the subcutaneous ICD sensing - a step towards personalised device therapy?
Impact of right ventricular pacing site on the subcutaneous ICD sensing - a step towards personalised device therapy?
Background: Patients with an existing subcutaneous implantable cardiac defibrillator (S-ICD) may develop a pacing indication. When transvenous pacing is not feasible, combining an S-ICD and a leadless pacemaker (LP) can be a reasonable option. There are reports of concomitant use of both devices. However, the effect of pacing on the S-ICD sensing is not well studied. We hypothesise that pacing changes R and T-wave amplitudes, causing changes in R:T ratios as perceived by a S-ICD, increasing the risk for T wave oversensing (TWO) during paced rhythm with a subsequent risk of inappropriate shocks.

Methods: This is a prospective study in patients undergoing electrophysiological studies. Participants were fitted with a Holter®, and the leads were placed to correspond to the vectors of an S-ICD. The right ventricle was paced at four positions for 10 beats each at 8 mA/2 ms. The Holter® traces were analysed, using two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) to assess the effect of pacing on the R:T ratio.

Results: Forty-seven patients (age 56.02 ± 16.02, 72% male) were enrolled (81% structurally normal heart, 15% dilated cardiomyopathy, 2% ischaemic cardiomyopathy, and 2% adult congenital heart disease). Age, sex, and aetiology had no effect on the R:T ratio. Pacing caused significant changes in the R:T ratio. There was no significant difference in the R:T ratios between the pacing sites (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: Pacing alters the R:T ratio significantly in most patients, theoretically increasing the risk for TWO and inappropriate shocks. Tailored programming for both devices is important for concomitant use of LPs and S-ICDs.
1383-875X
Elrefai, Mohamed
28916fea-4687-4d4b-99aa-961e73b710ab
Abouelasaad, Mohamed
62c5bd28-9c5f-4287-8b63-b25b2a2b7966
Menexi, Christina
f0ecdb62-41d4-4782-840c-e270b0102d33
Morgan, John
7bd04ada-ca61-4a2c-b1cf-1750ffa9d89c
Roberts, Paul R.
193431e8-f9d5-48d6-8f62-ed9052b2571d
Elrefai, Mohamed
28916fea-4687-4d4b-99aa-961e73b710ab
Abouelasaad, Mohamed
62c5bd28-9c5f-4287-8b63-b25b2a2b7966
Menexi, Christina
f0ecdb62-41d4-4782-840c-e270b0102d33
Morgan, John
7bd04ada-ca61-4a2c-b1cf-1750ffa9d89c
Roberts, Paul R.
193431e8-f9d5-48d6-8f62-ed9052b2571d

Elrefai, Mohamed, Abouelasaad, Mohamed, Menexi, Christina, Morgan, John and Roberts, Paul R. (2022) Impact of right ventricular pacing site on the subcutaneous ICD sensing - a step towards personalised device therapy? Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology. (doi:10.1007/s10840-022-01218-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Patients with an existing subcutaneous implantable cardiac defibrillator (S-ICD) may develop a pacing indication. When transvenous pacing is not feasible, combining an S-ICD and a leadless pacemaker (LP) can be a reasonable option. There are reports of concomitant use of both devices. However, the effect of pacing on the S-ICD sensing is not well studied. We hypothesise that pacing changes R and T-wave amplitudes, causing changes in R:T ratios as perceived by a S-ICD, increasing the risk for T wave oversensing (TWO) during paced rhythm with a subsequent risk of inappropriate shocks.

Methods: This is a prospective study in patients undergoing electrophysiological studies. Participants were fitted with a Holter®, and the leads were placed to correspond to the vectors of an S-ICD. The right ventricle was paced at four positions for 10 beats each at 8 mA/2 ms. The Holter® traces were analysed, using two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) to assess the effect of pacing on the R:T ratio.

Results: Forty-seven patients (age 56.02 ± 16.02, 72% male) were enrolled (81% structurally normal heart, 15% dilated cardiomyopathy, 2% ischaemic cardiomyopathy, and 2% adult congenital heart disease). Age, sex, and aetiology had no effect on the R:T ratio. Pacing caused significant changes in the R:T ratio. There was no significant difference in the R:T ratios between the pacing sites (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: Pacing alters the R:T ratio significantly in most patients, theoretically increasing the risk for TWO and inappropriate shocks. Tailored programming for both devices is important for concomitant use of LPs and S-ICDs.

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Accepted/In Press date: 7 April 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 April 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474365
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474365
ISSN: 1383-875X
PURE UUID: 7513cd34-e90b-4728-a806-6e6a54de9f5e

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Date deposited: 21 Feb 2023 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 00:13

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Contributors

Author: Mohamed Elrefai
Author: Mohamed Abouelasaad
Author: Christina Menexi
Author: John Morgan
Author: Paul R. Roberts

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