Abstract

IntroductionCardiac Implantable Electronic Device (CIED) infection is a serious complication associated with morbidity, mortality and high healthcare costs. Internationally, the published rate of CIED infection ranges from 1.0 percent to 1.6 percent. There is a lack of data on CIED infection rates in Australia; the reported range is from less than 1 percent at 30 days to 7 percent over 5 years. Due to the variability within the limited number of studies there is a need for further analyses of CIED infection rates in Australia.MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study using secondary linked hospital (the NSW Admitted Patient Data Collection) and mortality data for patients who underwent CIED procedures between July 2017 and June 2020 in NSW. Overall and procedure-and patient-specific incidence of infection was calculated.ResultsA total of 23,786 CIED procedures were performed among 22,404 patients and 422 CIED infections were identified, giving an overall infection rate of 1.77 percent. When infections were limited to those following a CIED procedure in the period July 2017-June 2020 (n=309), the procedure-specific CIED infection rate was 1.30 percent, ranging from 1.01 percent for permanent pacemaker (PPM) to 2.71 percent for cardiac resynchronization therapy-defibrillator (CRT-D). The proportion of patients undergoing CIED procedures in this period who had a subsequent CIED infection was 1.29 percent, ranging from 0.97 percent for permanent pacemaker (PPM) to 3.05 percent for cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillator (CRT-D). Procedure-based infection rate in high-risk patients (generator replacement; system upgrade; revision; or CRT-D procedure) was 1.47 percent and patient-based infection rate was 1.68 percent. Infection rate was highest within the first month following the CIED procedure that dropped significantly over time.ConclusionsRates of infection were highest among patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) devices, and those who underwent revision or upgrade procedures. Ongoing monitoring of CIED infection rates and preventative measures are necessary, especially for high-risk patients. This study highlights the important role linked secondary data has in reducing uncertainty and removing the reliance on international estimates by providing targeted, local data for health technology assessment.

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