Abstract

Background: Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) therapy prevents sudden cardiac death in selected patients with heart failure. When a primary prevention ICD arrives at elective replacement interval (ERI), conventional management is to replace the device. However, the effectiveness of ICDs in patients with nonischemic and ischemic cardiomyopathy (NICM and ICM, respectively) whose left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) improved to ≥50% before replacement is unclear. Hypothesis: The therapeutic benefit of primary prevention ICD for NICM is attenuated by the recovery of LVEF at the time of ERI. Methods: Consecutive patients presenting for first time primary prevention ICD battery change-out at a single quaternary care center between 1/1/2008 and 6/27/2019 were included. The primary endpoint was the rate of ICD therapy (ICD discharge and anti-tachycardia pacing) according to LVEF recovery at ERI. Results: During the study period 6851 ICDs were placed, of which 310 underwent battery change-out, of whom 100 did not receive therapy from the first ICD, of whom 44 had NICM. The demographics of the NICM cohort are in the table. Following ERI, 0 (0%) with NICM and recovered LVEF had received ICD therapy, whereas 13 (30%) with persistently low LVEF had received therapy (p = 0.07). Furthermore, among patients without recovered LVEF, the NICM group had a lower rate of therapy (4, 12%) than the ICM group (12, 32%) (p=0.04). Conclusion: Rates of ICD therapy provided by primary prevention ICD after first battery change out trended towards a significantly lower rate in NICM patients with LVEF that recovered to ≥50% than those without LVEF recovery. No other patient demographic significantly predicted therapy-free survival but the analysis was limited by sample size. A prospective study with a larger cohort would be necessary to better estimate therapy-free survival.

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