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Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Dr David Sim Associate Consultant Heart Failure/Transplant National Heart Centre Singapore Introduction Ventricular arrhythmias common in HF – Malignant or potentially lethal arrhythmias (VT/VF) – Non sustained or hemodynamically tolerated arrhythmias (NSVT, VPB, AIVR) Clinical significance largely based upon whether they predict future malignant arrhythmias or SCD Causes of Death in HF Exact percentages vary with severity of disease – Progressive pump failure – Unexpected SCD – SCD during episodes of clinical worsening of HF VT degenerating into VF most common cause of SCD Other causes of SCD – Bradyarrhythmias – Non arrhythmic Causes of death in HF 70 64 59 60 56 50 40 33 30 24 20 10 12 26 15 11 0 NYHA II NYHA III NYHA IV Effect of metoprolol CR/XL in chronic heart failure: Metoprolol CR/XL Randomised Intervention Trial in Congestive Heart Failure (MERIT-HF) Lancet 1999 Jun 12;353(9169):2001-7. CHF Other SCD Primary Prevention Role of ICD – Severity of LV dysfunction – Severity of clinical HF – Etiology of LV dysfunction (ischemic or non ischemic) Risk of SCD increases with severity of both LV dysfunction and clinical HF Predictors of SCD Ischemic – Signal averaged ECG – Heart rate variability – Twave alterans Non ischemic – Risk stratificvation more difficult – Only LVEF significantly associated with arrhythmia risk Marburg Cardiomyopathy Study (Grimm W, Christ M, Bach J et al. Circulation 2003; 108:2883. ACC/AHA 2009 Guidelines Primary Prevention Clinical Trials of Primary Prevention MUSTT – Buxton AE, Lee KL, Fisher JD et al. N Engl J Med 1999; 341:1882. MADIT/MADIT – – II Moss, AJ, Hall, WJ, Cannom, DS, et al. N Engl J Med 1996; 335:1933. Moss AJ, Zareba W, Hall WJ et al. N Engl J Med 2002; 346: 877-83. DINAMIT – Hohnloser SH, Kuck KH, Dorian P et al. N Engl J Med. 2004; 351:2481. SCD – HeFT (ischemic/non ischemic) Bardy, GH, Lee, KL, Mark, DB, et al. N Engl J Med 2005; 352:225. DEFINITE – (non ischemic) Kadish A, Schaechter A, Subacius H et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006; 47: 2477. EPS guided therapy MADIT MUSTT – N= 196 – NYHA I-III – Prior MI, – N= 704 – NYHA I-III – Prior MI, asymptomatic NSVT, LVEF 35% or less, inducible sustained VT on EPS – ICD vs pharmacological therapy asymptomatic NSVT, LVEF 40% or less, inducible sustained VT – No therapy vs EPS guided antiarrhythmic therapy (antiarrhythmic agent or ICD) EPS guided therapy MADIT II N = 1232 MI > 30 days (> 3 months if bypass surgery performed) LVEF 30% or less ICD vs conventionl medical therapy SCD-HeFT N= 2521 NYHA II/III Ischemic or non ischemic LVEF 35% or less 3 arms – ICD – Amiodarone – Placebo Quality of Life Prognostic significance of ICD shocks Timing of ICD implantation DINAMIT N= 674 Post MI within the preceding 6 to 40 days LVEF 35% or less Reduced HR variability or elevated resting HR (80 beats/min or more) Timing of ICD implantation Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Development of ventricular dyssynchrony in some patients with HF and cardiomyopathy Ventricular dyssynchrony refers to the loss of coordinated contraction across the LV, which can further impair the pump function of the failing ventricle, resulting in worse HF symptoms CXR : biventricular pacing ACC/AHA 2009 Guidelines CRT Companion trial N= 1520 NYHA III/IV LVEF 35% or less QRS duration of at least 120ms Hospitalization for HF in preceding 12 months Bristow MR, Saxon LA, Boehmer J et al. N Engl J Med. 2004 May 20;350(21):2140-50. Bristow MR, Saxon LA, Boehmer J et al. NEJM 2004; 350: 2140 Antiarrhythmic drugs RCTs do not support the routine use of prophylactic antiarrhythmic drugs, other than beta blockers, to prevent SCD in patients with HF. Lack of benefit – Proarrhythmia – Incomplete suppression of ventricular arrhythmias Amiodarone Advantae of relatively low rate of proarrhythmia Not recommended for prevention of SCD Decrease recurrence of – Atrial arrhythmias – ICD discharge for ventricular arrhythmias Beta-Blockers (CIBIS II) Lancet 1999 Jan 2;353(9146):9-13. (MERIT-HF) Lancet 1999 Jun 12;353(9169):2001-7. Secondary Prevention High risk of future arrhythmic events and SCD in patients with HF – Survive an episode of SCD – Sustained VT ICD : most effective for improving survival ACC/AHA 2009 Guidelines Secondary Prevention Meta-analysis Other treatment options Antiarrhythmic drugs – Adjunct to ICD in patients with frequent shcoks – Patients who refused ICD or are not candidate for ICD Radiofrequency abalation – Bundle branch reentrant VT Arrhythmia Surgery Cardiac Transplantation – Need ICD as bridge to Transplant Low Rate of Automated Defibrillator Implantation in Heart Failure Patients Dr Choon Pin Lim, RN Lee Wah Teo, Dr Chi Keong Ching, Dr Bernard Wing Kuin Kwok, Dr David Kheng Leng Sim National Heart Centre SINGAPORE Background Internal cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) has been shown to prevent sudden cardiac deaths in patients with left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) <35%. We report on the prevalence of AICD implantation in heart failure (HF) patients receiving contemporary treatment at our centre. Method A single centre retrospective study over a 6 months period including patients < 80 years old, who were enrolled in our heart failure clinical care pathway was performed. Demographics including gender, age, LVEF and HF aetiology were analysed. The prevalence of ICD implantation in patients enrolled in our formal heart failure programme (HFP) was compared with those followed up in the general cardiology clinic. Results Of the 321 patients, 59.5% had an LVEF of less than 35%. Of these 191 patients, 75.9% were male, 24.1% female. Mean age was 62.6±10.6 years. Mean LVEF was 21.6±6.4%. The most common aetiologies were ischaemic heart disease (69.6%) and non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy (17.3%). 38 patients did not fulfill standard indications for ICD implantation (including LVEF improvement > 35% during follow-up, recent or planned coronary revascularization, poor premorbid condition and/or NYHA IV functional status). Of the 153 patients who had standard indications for ICD, only 21.6% received an ICD during the course of 6 months follow-up. 17.6% (n=27) of these eligible patients were enrolled in a HFP: 51.9% received an ICD, 37.0% declined ICD implantation, while 11.1% were not offered. Majority (n=126) were followed up in the general cardiology clinic: 15.1% received an ICD implantation, 19.0% declined ICD implantation, while 65.9% were not offered. The main reason for patients declining ICD implantation was financial constraints. Ischaemic Cardiomyopathy 69.6% Non-ischaemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy 17.3% Alocoholic Cardiomyopathy 4.2% Rheumatic Heart Disease 3.1% 5.8% Others 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Heart Failure Aetiology 11.1% 37.0% 51.9% Heart Failure Programme patients 15.1% 65.9% 19.0% AICD implanted Delined AICD AICD not offered General Cardiology Clinic patients Conclusions The prevalence of ICD implantation in HF patients was 21.6% in our study, with a higher rate amongst patients who were enrolled in a HFP. This may be attributable to the lack of awareness amongst general cardiologists and the high cost of device implantation locally. Demographic 191 (59.5%) out of 321 patients had LVEF ≤ 35% Male (75.9%) and female (24.1%) Chinese (64.9%), Malay (21.5%), Indian (13.1%), Other (0.5%) Mean Age : 62.6 ± 10.6 (youngest 29, oldest 79) Mean LVEF 21.6% Eligibility for ICD 38 patients did not fulfil standard indications for ICD – – – – LVEF improve Planned coronary revascularization Poor premorbid condition NYHA IV 153 patients fulfil criteria for – 126 General cardiology clinic – 27 Heart Failure Clinic ICD Results 70 65.9 60 51.9 50 AICD implanted 37 40 30 20 Declined AICD Not offered 19 15.1 11.1 10 0 General HF Conclusions Optimal medical therapy + lifestyle modification in all patients Device therapy in selected patients Low rate of usage of AICD in local context Strategies warranted to increase the awareness among physicians to adhere to the recommended guidelines