VDD pacing and VVI pacing yielded similar overall survival in high degree AV block, but VVI pacing worsened 5-year survival in patients with congestive heart failure (47% vs 72%, P=0.008).
Cohort (n=148)
Does rate adaptive atrial synchronous (VDD) pacing improve survival compared to fixed rate ventricular inhibited (VVI) pacing in patients with high degree AV block?
In patients with high degree AV block and concomitant congestive heart failure, VDD pacing is associated with significantly better survival than VVI pacing.
Survival in patients paced for high degree AV block has been demonstrated to be influenced by underlying cardiac disease in particular congestive heart failure. One previous study has suggested that dual chamber pacing may improve the vital prognosis for such patients. To investigate this, 74 patients treated with rate adaptive atrial synchronous (VDD) and 74 patients treated with VVI pacemakers for high degree AV block, were retrospectively studied for a mean of 5.4 years by life-table analysis. The two groups had an equal distribution of age, sex, date of pacemaker implantation, and concomitant cardiovascular diseases. Total mortality and estimated survival did not differ between the two groups. The estimated survival in the VDD group at 1, 3, and 5 years for patients without and with congestive heart failure was 94%, 86% and 78%, and 92%, 83% and 72%, respectively. In the VVI group the corresponding values were 95%, 90%, and 83% for patients without congestive heart failure and 82%, 64%, and 47% for those with congestive heart failure (P = 0.008). Compared to the expected survival rate of the general Swedish population, only the VVI group with congestive heart failure, had an excess mortality (P = 0.007). Patients with high degree AV block have a fairly normal vital prognosis irrespective of pacing mode. The prognosis for patients with congestive heart failure was negatively affected by VVI pacing. Thus, for patients with congestive heart failure the choice of pacing mode is of vital importance, whereas for patients without congestive heart failure, other factors such as feeling of well-being and exercise capacity should decide the final choice of pacing mode.
LINDE‐EDELSTAM et al. (Sun,) conducted a cohort in High degree atrioventricular block (n=148). Rate adaptive atrial synchronous (VDD) pacing vs. Fixed rate ventricular inhibited (VVI) pacing was evaluated on Total mortality and estimated survival. VDD pacing and VVI pacing yielded similar overall survival in high degree AV block, but VVI pacing worsened 5-year survival in patients with congestive heart failure (47% vs 72%, P=0.008).
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