Does total system removal prevent infection recurrence compared to partial removal or antibiotics alone in patients with ICD infections?
Treatment of ICD-associated infections generally requires total system removal to prevent recurrence, though sterilized generator units can be safely reimplanted to reduce costs.
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) have been documented as an effective modality in reducing arrhythmic mortality. A serious complication associated with implantation of the device is infection. Few studies have addressed this issue. Two hundred seven patients with refractory ventricular arrhythmias underwent 207 ICD implantations, and 56 subcutaneous generator changes at our institution. Eight patients developed wound infections, four following ICD implantation (4 out of 207 or 1.9%), and four following a generator change (4 out of 56 or 7.1%). Wound cultures most commonly revealed Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis. Infections treated with antibiotics alone, or with only generator removal, frequently recurred (four out of five attempts). There were no recurrences following total patch/lead and generator system removal. In five patients, the same generator unit was successfully reimplanted following ethylene oxide sterilization without infection recurrence. We conclude that treatment of device-associated infection generally requires total generator and patch/lead system removal, and that generator units can be successfully reimplanted yielding substantial cost savings.
Wunderly et al. (Thu,) studied this question.