Abstract

Transvenous lead extraction (TLE) may be necessary due to infective and noninfective indications. We aim to identify predictors of 30-day mortality and risk factors between infective versus noninfective groups and systemic versus local infection subgroups. A total of 925 TLEs between October 2000 and December 2016 were prospectively collected and dichotomized (infective group n=505vs noninfective group n=420 and systemic infection n=164vs local infection n=341). All-cause major complication including deaths was significantly higher (5.1%, n=26vs 1.2%, n=5, P=0.001) as well as 30-day mortality (4.0%, n=20vs 0.2%, n=1, P<0.001) in the infective group compared to the noninfective group. Both subgroups (systemic vs local infection) were balanced for demographics. All-cause major complication including deaths was significantly higher (9.1%, n=15vs 3.2%, n=11, P=0.008) as well as all-cause 30-day mortality (7.9%, n=13vs 2.1%, n=7, P=0.003) in the systemic infection subgroup compared to the local infection subgroup. Patients undergoing TLE for infective indications are at greater risk of 30-day all-cause mortality compared to noninfective patients. Patients undergoing TLE for systemic infective indications are at greater risk of 30-day all-cause mortality compared to patients with local infection. Renal impairment, systemic infection, and elevated preprocedure C-reactive protein are independent predictors of 30-day all-cause mortality in patients undergoing TLE for an infective indication.

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