Programmed electrical stimulation induced ventricular arrhythmias in 85% of patients with Brugada syndrome compared to 0% of healthy controls, with 82% remaining inducible at 2 months.
Observational (n=46)
Brugada syndrome (n=46)
Programmed electrical stimulation (PES) vs Healthy controls
PES protocol completion or induction of sustained or reproducible nonsustained fast ventricular arrhythmia
Absolute Event Rate: 85% vs 0%
INTRODUCTION: Inducibility of ventricular arrhythmias at programmed electrical stimulation (PES) ranges between 50% and 80% of patients with Brugada syndrome. However, the variety of PES protocols and the lack of data relative to a control group or to ventricular arrhythmia reproducibility contribute to a still undefined interpretation of PES outcome in Brugada syndrome. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twenty-one patients with Brugada syndrome (18 men and 3 women; mean age 34 years; 9/21 symptomatic; 8/21 with SCN5A gene mutation) underwent a PES protocol from two right ventricular sites. The endpoint was PES protocol completion or induction of sustained or reproducible (>6 consecutive inductions) nonsustained (>6 beats) fast ventricular arrhythmia. In 17 of 21 patients with Brugada syndrome, PES was repeated 2 months later to test ventricular arrhythmia reproducibility. Twenty-five healthy patients (17 men; mean age 36 years) formed the control group. In patients with Brugada syndrome, ventricular arrhythmia inducibility rate at PES was high (18/21 patients 85%) and increased with protocol aggressiveness, independent of clinical presentation. In control subjects, no ventricular arrhythmias were induced. Among patients with Brugada syndrome, 14 (82%) of 17 patients remained inducible at a second PES. CONCLUSION: In our experience, ventricular arrhythmia inducibility in patients with Brugada syndrome, at variance with healthy controls, is high and does not correlate with clinical presentation. PES inducibility is deeply influenced by the protocol used. PES outcome is reproducible at a mid-term follow-up mainly if a categorical endpoint (inducible vs noninducible) is used. The need to assess the predictive value of specific PES protocols in targeted studies is widely emerging and is confirmed by our results.
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Maurizio Gasparini
Electrophysiology
Silvia G. Priori
University of Siena
Massimo Mantica
University of Foggia
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology
University of Pavia
Humanitas University
Fondazione Salvatore Maugeri
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Gasparini et al. (Sun,) conducted a observational in Brugada syndrome (n=46). Programmed electrical stimulation (PES) vs. Healthy controls was evaluated on PES protocol completion or induction of sustained or reproducible nonsustained fast ventricular arrhythmia. Programmed electrical stimulation induced ventricular arrhythmias in 85% of patients with Brugada syndrome compared to 0% of healthy controls, with 82% remaining inducible at 2 months.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0cfacdb31ab1d6e01e7471 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1540-8167.2002.00880.x