Abstract

Introduction: The ICD Sports Registry demonstrated that many athletes with ICDs can participate in competitive sports without death, failure to defibrillate, or physical injury. However, sudden cardiac arrest is more prevalent and has worse outcomes in Black compared to White individuals in the general population and among athletes. Outcomes of sports participation for Black athletes with ICDs have not been described. Aim: To describe the risk of arrhythmia and efficacy of ICDs in Black athletes. Methods: This is a post-hoc subgroup analysis of the ICD Sports Registry, which enrolled athletes with ICDs age 10 to 60, participating in organized, competitive sports, and followed them prospectively for four years. The endpoints and methods are reported previously. Results: Among the 440 athletes, 15 were Black and 410 white. Among the Black athletes, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was the most common diagnosis (40%) and 87% were implanted for secondary prevention or syncope (vs 69% in White athletes). Most common sports were basketball (8), softball (4), and running (3), with 7 Black athletes competing on varsity/junior varsity/traveling teams. Among the Black athletes, there were no appropriate shocks during sports, among white athletes, 7% received an appropriate shock during sports. Among Black athletes, there was one appropriate shock event for ventricular tachycardia (7%), a VT storm in an athlete with idiopathic VF, non-sports-related. Among white athletes, 10% received appropriate shocks during non-sports activities. Two Black athletes (13%) received an inappropriate shock, one competition-related (sinus tachycardia) and the other for T wave oversensing at rest, vs 12% of white athletes. There were no sports-related deaths, arrests, or arrhythmia-related injuries in either group. Conclusions: Black athletes represented a small subset of the ICD Sports Registry. Reasons for this are unknown, but may include disparities in ICD implantation and/or in research recruitment/ participation. These Black athletes experienced both appropriate and inappropriate shocks as did white athletes. These data do not suggest a signal for harm for competitive sports participation for Black athletes with ICDs but larger studies are needed.

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