Does a novel insertable cardiac monitor algorithm accurately detect premature ventricular contractions and estimate daily burden compared to standard Holter monitoring?
A novel insertable cardiac monitor algorithm can reliably detect premature ventricular contractions and estimate 24-hour burden, correlating strongly with standard Holter monitoring.
Background: Premature ventricular contraction (PVC) burden is a clinically important metric in the context of PVC-induced cardiomyopathy and is commonly obtained via ambulatory electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring. Objective: The purpose of this analysis is to characterize the performance of a novel PVC detection algorithm capable of identifying single PVCs and PVC sequences (couplets and triplets) for estimation of 24-hour PVC burden in an insertable cardiac monitor (ICM). Methods: Performance of the ICM algorithm for detecting PVCs was validated by replaying 748 patient-triggered ICM-recorded ECG episodes from 184 patients through the ICM device. To assess performance over longer ambulatory periods, a validated software model equivalent of the implemented ICM algorithm was evaluated against a 24-hour Holter dataset of 89 patients. The model also was used to evaluate performance on an established reference library from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Beth Israel Hospital (MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database) as a basis of comparison with other published algorithms. Results: = 0.95. The sensitivity for identifying patients with PVC burdens ≥10% was 84%, with a patient-level positive predictive value (PPV) of 100%. Beat-level sensitivity of the PVC algorithm evaluated against the MIT-BIH dataset was 87.9% with a PPV of 96.4%. Conclusion: The ICM algorithm reliably detects PVCs with high sensitivity and specificity. Twenty-four-hour PVC burden measurements demonstrated a strong correlation with a gold standard 12-lead Holter and may provide utility for identifying patients at risk for worsening left ventricular function.
Siejko et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: