Efficacy and Safety of an Extravascular Implantable Cardioverter–Defibrillator

Paul A. Friedman(Mayo Clinic), Francis Murgatroyd(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Lucas V.A. Boersma(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Jaimie Manlucu(Chinese University of Hong Kong), David O’Donnell(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Bradley P. Knight(Northwestern University), Nicolas Clémenty(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Christophe Leclercq(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Anish K. Amin(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Béla Merkely(Semmelweis University), Ulrika Birgersdotter‐Green(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Joseph Yat‐Sun Chan(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Mauro Biffi(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Reinoud E. Knops(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Greg Engel(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Ignacio Muñoz Carvajal(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Laurence M. Epstein(Northwell Health), Venkata Sagi(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Jens Brock Johansen(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Maciej Sterliński(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Clemens Steinwender(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Troy Hounshell(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Richard Abben(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Amy Thompson(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Christopher Wiggenhorn(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Sarah Willey(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Ian Crozier(Chinese University of Hong Kong)
New England Journal of Medicine
August 28, 2022
Cited by 218Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The extravascular implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) has a single lead implanted substernally to enable pause-prevention pacing, antitachycardia pacing, and defibrillation energy similar to that of transvenous ICDs. The safety and efficacy of extravascular ICDs are not yet known. METHODS: We conducted a prospective, single-group, nonrandomized, premarket global clinical study involving patients with a class I or IIa indication for an ICD, all of whom received an extravascular ICD system. The primary efficacy end point was successful defibrillation at implantation. The efficacy objective would be met if the lower boundary of the one-sided 97.5% confidence interval for the percentage of patients with successful defibrillation was greater than 88%. The primary safety end point was freedom from major system- or procedure-related complications at 6 months. The safety objective would be met if the lower boundary of the one-sided 97.5% confidence interval for the percentage of patients free from such complications was greater than 79%. RESULTS: A total of 356 patients were enrolled, 316 of whom had an implantation attempt. Among the 302 patients in whom ventricular arrhythmia could be induced and who completed the defibrillation testing protocol, the percentage of patients with successful defibrillation was 98.7% (lower boundary of the one-sided 97.5% confidence interval [CI], 96.6%; P<0.001 for the comparison with the performance goal of 88%); 299 of 316 patients (94.6%) were discharged with a working ICD system. The Kaplan-Meier estimate of the percentage of patients free from major system- or procedure-related complications at 6 months was 92.6% (lower boundary of the one-sided 97.5% CI, 89.0%; P<0.001 for the comparison with the performance goal of 79%). No major intraprocedural complications were reported. At 6 months, 25 major complications were observed, in 23 of 316 patients (7.3%). The success rate of antitachycardia pacing, as assessed with generalized estimating equations, was 50.8% (95% CI, 23.3 to 77.8). A total of 29 patients received 118 inappropriate shocks for 81 arrhythmic episodes. Eight systems were explanted without extravascular ICD replacement over the 10.6-month mean follow-up period. CONCLUSIONS: In this prospective global study, we found that extravascular ICDs were implanted safely and were able to detect and terminate induced ventricular arrhythmias at the time of implantation. (Funded by Medtronic; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04060680.).


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis