Adding global electric heterogeneity (GEH) parameters to clinical and demographic factors improved the prediction of sudden cardiac death, increasing the C statistic from 0.777 to 0.790 (P=0.008).
Cohort (n=20,177)
Yes
Does the addition of global electric heterogeneity (GEH) ECG parameters to clinical and demographic factors improve the prediction of sudden cardiac death in the general population?
The addition of global electric heterogeneity parameters from standard 12-lead ECGs to traditional clinical risk factors significantly improves the prediction of sudden cardiac death in the general population.
Effect estimate: NRI 18.3%
Absolute Event Rate: 0.79% vs 0.777%
p-value: p=0.008
BACKGROUND: Asymptomatic individuals account for the majority of sudden cardiac deaths (SCDs). Development of effective, low-cost, and noninvasive SCD risk stratification tools is necessary. METHODS AND RESULTS: Participants from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study and Cardiovascular Health Study (n=20 177; age, 59.3±10.1 years; age range, 44-100 years; 56% female; 77% white) were followed up for 14.0 years (median). Five ECG markers of global electric heterogeneity (GEH; sum absolute QRST integral, spatial QRST angle, spatial ventricular gradient SVG magnitude, SVG elevation, and SVG azimuth) were measured on standard 12-lead ECGs. Cox proportional hazards and competing risks models evaluated associations between GEH electrocardiographic parameters and SCD. An SCD competing risks score was derived from demographics, comorbidities, and GEH parameters. SCD incidence was 1.86 per 1000 person-years. After multivariable adjustment, baseline GEH parameters and large increases in GEH parameters over time were independently associated with SCD. Final SCD risk scores included age, sex, race, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, coronary heart disease, stroke, and GEH parameters as continuous variables. When GEH parameters were added to clinical/demographic factors, the C statistic increased from 0.777 to 0.790 (P=0.008), the risk score classified 10-year SCD risk as high (>5%) in 7.2% of participants, 10% of SCD victims were appropriately reclassified into a high-risk category, and only 1.4% of SCD victims were inappropriately reclassified from high to intermediate risk. The net reclassification index was 18.3%. CONCLUSIONS: Abnormal electrophysiological substrate quantified by GEH parameters is independently associated with SCD in the general population. The addition of GEH parameters to clinical characteristics improves SCD risk prediction.
قام واكس وآخرون (يوم الجمعة) بتنفيذ دراسة جماعية حول خطر الوفاة القلبية المفاجئة في السكان العامين (n=20,177). تم تقييم علامات تخطيط القلب الكهربائية العالمية (GEH) مقابل العوامل السريرية والديموغرافية بمفردها في توقع الوفاة القلبية المفاجئة (إحصائية C) (NRI 18.3%، p=0.008). أضافت معلمات التخطيط الكهربائي العالمي (GEH) إلى العوامل السريرية والديموغرافية تحسيناً في توقع الوفاة القلبية المفاجئة، مما زاد إحصائية C من 0.777 إلى 0.790 (P=0.008).