Abstract

The programming of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) influences inappropriate shock rates. The aim of the study is to analyse rates of patients with appropriate and inappropriate shocks according to detection zones in the OPTION trial. All patients received dual chamber (DC) ICDs randomly assigned to be programmed either to single chamber (SC) or to DC settings including PARAD+ algorithm. In a post-hoc analysis, rates of patients with inappropriate and appropriate shocks were calculated for shocks triggered at heart rates ≥170 bpm (ventricular tachycardia zone) and at rates ≥200 bpm (ventricular fibrillation zone). In the SC group, higher rates of patients with total and inappropriate shocks were delivered at heart rates ≥170 bpm than at rates ≥200 bpm (total shocks: 21.1% vs. 16.6%; p = 0.002; inappropriate shocks: 7.6% vs. 4.5%, p = 0.016; appropriate shocks: 15.2% vs. 13.5%; p = n.s.). No such differences were observed in the DC group (total shocks: 14.3% vs. 12.6%; p = n.s.; inappropriate shocks: 3.9% vs. 3.6%; p = n.s.; appropriate shocks: 12.2% vs. 10.4%; p = n.s.). The higher frequency of patients with total shocks with SC settings than with DC settings that benefit from PARAD+ was driven by a higher percentage of patients with inappropriate shocks in the VT zone (170–200 bpm) in the SC population.

Highlights

  • Remains out on the most appropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), algorithm and programming for ICD patients, including the most appropriate boundaries of the VT zone

  • To provide a more differentiated picture of the patterns of inappropriate shocks in the two settings, we performed a post-hoc analysis of appropriate and inappropriate shocks delivered in the VT zone or the ventricular fibrillation (VF) zones in the SC and DC groups

  • The Kaplan-Meier curves of inappropriate shocks over time using the ≥ 170 bpm and ≥ 200 bpm cut-off do not suggest clustering of shocks at specific times throughout the two years of follow-up (Fig. 5). In this post-hoc analysis of ICD therapies from the OPTION trial, we found significant differences in the potential effects of device programming on percentages of patients with inappropriate shocks between the SC and DC groups, respectively

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of the study is to analyse rates of patients with appropriate and inappropriate shocks according to detection zones in the OPTION trial

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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