Conduction system pacing in ATTR-CM yielded significantly narrower QRS duration (122ms) and lower capture thresholds (0.75V) compared to CRT (155ms, 1.3V) and conventional pacing (160ms).
Does conduction system pacing or cardiac resynchronization therapy improve electrical performance and clinical outcomes compared to conventional pacing in patients with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy?
Conduction system pacing in ATTR-CM patients provides superior electrical resynchronization with shorter paced QRS durations and low capture thresholds compared to conventional and CRT pacing, though its impact on long-term clinical outcomes requires further study.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Background:Conduction system disorders and arrhythmias may require pacemaker or ICD implantation in transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM).The optimal mode of pacing in ATTR-CM remains unknown.Objective: To compare electrical performance and clinical outcomes of conventional, resynchronisation and conduction system pacing in ATTR-CM. Methods:In this observational study, the effects of cardiac pacing were investigated in 250 consecutive ATTR-CM patients presenting at Inselspital Bern between June 2019 and February 2023.Results: During follow-up, 67 of 250 patients (26.8%) received a pacemaker.Implantation of conventional single-or dual-chamber (VVI/DDD) pacemakers was more common before ATTR-CM diagnosis (n=17/25; 68%), physiological pacing (CRT/CSP) was increasingly utilized thereafter n=24/42 (57.1%).Sick sinus syndrome n=11/35 (31.4%) vs. 6/32 (18.8% and higherdegree AV-block n=20/35 (57.1%) vs. 9/32 (28.1%) were more common indications for VVI/DDD, with pursuit of a pace/ablate strategy n=12/32 (37.5%) and heart failure n=5/32 (15.6%) contributing significantly to implantation of CRT/CSP.QRS duration width was significantly lower with CSP 122ms (IQR:120-139), compared to CRT 155ms (IQR:141-160) or VVI/DDD [160ms (IQR:144-180), p0.05).Patients referred for CRT/CSP had a higher incidence of heart failure (p=0.014) and more common heart failure hospitalizations (p=0.03),however, mortality was not significantly different (p=0.28). Conclusions:Offering stable electrical performance and improved resynchronization, the effect of conduction system pacing on clinical outcomes warrants further exploration in ATTR-CM.
Dobner et al. (Sun,) reported a other. Conduction system pacing in ATTR-CM yielded significantly narrower QRS duration (122ms) and lower capture thresholds (0.75V) compared to CRT (155ms, 1.3V) and conventional pacing (160ms).