Primary Results From the Understanding Outcomes With the S-ICD in Primary Prevention Patients With Low Ejection Fraction (UNTOUCHED) Trial

Michael R. Gold(Medical University of South Carolina), Pier D. Lambiase(Queen Mary University of London), Mikhael F. El‐Chami(Emory University Hospital), Reinoud E. Knops(University of Amsterdam), Johan D. Aasbo(Central Baptist Hospital), Maria Grazia Bongiorni(Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Pisana), Andrea M. Russo(Cooper Medical School of Rowan University), Jean‐Claude Deharo(Hôpital de la Timone), Martin C. Burke(CorVita Science Foundation), Jay Dinerman(Davidson Technologies (United States)), Craig Barr(Russells Hall Hospital), Naushad Shaik(AdventHealth Orlando), Nathan Carter(Boston Scientific (United States)), Thomas J. Stoltz(University of St. Thomas - Minnesota), Kenneth M. Steín(Boston Scientific (United States)), Amy Brisben(Boston Scientific (United States)), Lucas V.A. Boersma(St. Antonius Ziekenhuis), Timothy Phelan, Hazim Al‐Ameri, Abdulhay Albirini, Rizwan Alimohammad, Miguel Á. Arias, Nicolas Badenco(Unité de recherche sur les maladies cardiovasculaires et métaboliques), Géraldine Bertaux, Deepak Bhakta, Sanjay Bindra, Hugues Blangy, Serge Bovéda, Johansen Brock, Mathias Busch, Naiara Calvo, Christopher Cassidy, Michel Chauvin, Halim Marzak, Jason S. Chinitz, Allen Ciuffo, Jude Clancy, Karl J. Crossen, Paolo De Filippo, Fausto Devecchi, Sreekanth Karanam, Rahul N. Doshi, Lars Eckardt, Matthew Fedor, Roger A. Freedman, Anil K. Gehi, Peter Goethals, Nils Gosau, Charles Gottlieb, Gregory Granrud, Radmira Greenstein, Firas Hamdan, Sam Hanon, Alborz Hassankhani, Rick Henderson, Stefan H. Hohnloser, David T. Huang, Didier Irles, Gautham Kalahasty, Pedram Kazemian, Farhat Khairallah, Brian Kim, Edward Kim, Christoph A. Klein, Bradley P. Knight, Niuton Koide, Richard Kuk, Christophe Leclercq, Michael Lee(Medical University of South Carolina), Shang-Chiun Lee, Corinna Lenz, Nigel Lewis, Robert K. Lewis, George E. Mark, Christelle Marquié, Kelly M. W. McDonnell, John P. McKenzie, Faisal M. Merchant, Sameh Mobarek, Tiziano Moccetti, Franck Molin, Francois Philliopon, Giovanni Morani, Daniel P. Morin, G. André Ng(Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Pisana), Emmanuel Nsah, Manoj Panday, Jean‐Luc Pasquié, Nicasio Castellano Perez, Francisco Perez-Gil, Paweł Ptaszyński, Anil Rajendra, Troy E. Rhodes, Paul R. Roberts, Steven K. Rowe, Samir Saba, Venkata Sagi, Brian H. Sarter, John A. Schoenhard, John J. Schutzman, Luis R. Scott, Nathan M. Segerson(Boston Scientific (United States)), Ali Shakir, Matthew Smelley, Jan Steffel, J. Lacy Sturdivant, Ghiyath Tabbal, Drory S. Tendler, Dominic A.M.J. Theuns, Liesbeth Timmers, Matthew Trojan, Shane Tsai, Gaurav A. Upadhyay, Santosh Varkey, Stefano Viani, Stanislav Weiner, Raul Weiss, S. Wiggins, David J. Wright, Andrew A. Zadeh, Edgar Zitron
Circulation
October 19, 2020
Cited by 215Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The subcutaneous (S) implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is safe and effective for sudden cardiac death prevention. However, patients in previous S-ICD studies had fewer comorbidities, had less left ventricular dysfunction, and received more inappropriate shocks (IAS) than in typical transvenous ICD trials. The UNTOUCHED trial (Understanding Outcomes With the S-ICD in Primary Prevention Patients With Low Ejection Fraction) was designed to evaluate the IAS rate in a more typical, contemporary ICD patient population implanted with the S-ICD using standardized programming and enhanced discrimination algorithms. METHODS: Primary prevention patients with left ventricular ejection fraction ≤35% and no pacing indications were included. Generation 2 or 3 S-ICD devices were implanted and programmed with rate-based therapy delivery for rates ≥250 beats per minute and morphology discrimination for rates ≥200 and <250 beats per minute. Patients were followed for 18 months. The primary end point was the IAS-free rate compared with a 91.6% performance goal, derived from the results for the ICD-only patients in the MADIT-RIT study (Multicenter Automatic Defibrillator Implantation Trial-Reduce Inappropriate Therapy). Kaplan-Meier analyses were performed to evaluate event-free rates for IAS, all-cause shock, and complications. Multivariable proportional hazard analysis was performed to determine predictors of end points. RESULTS: S-ICD implant was attempted in 1116 patients, and 1111 patients were included in postimplant follow-up analysis. The cohort had a mean age of 55.8±12.4 years, 25.6% were women, 23.4% were Black, 53.5% had ischemic heart disease, 87.7% had symptomatic heart failure, and the mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 26.4±5.8%. Eighteen-month freedom from IAS was 95.9% (lower confidence limit, 94.8%). Predictors of reduced incidence of IAS were implanting the most recent generation of device, using the 3-incision technique, no history of atrial fibrillation, and ischemic cause. The 18-month all-cause shock-free rate was 90.6% (lower confidence limit, 89.0%), meeting the prespecified performance goal of 85.8%. Conversion success rate for appropriate, discrete episodes was 98.4%. Complication-free rate at 18 months was 92.7%. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates high efficacy and safety with contemporary S-ICD devices and programming despite the relatively high incidence of comorbidities in comparison with earlier S-ICD trials. The inappropriate shock rate (3.1% at 1 year) is the lowest reported for the S-ICD and lower than many transvenous ICD studies using contemporary programming to reduce IAS. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT02433379.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis