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Gerald C. Kaye, Nicholas J. Linker, Thomas H. Marwick, Lucy Pollock, Laura Graham, Erika Pouliot, Jan Poloniecki, Michael Gammage, on behalf of the Protect-Pace trial investigators, Gerald Kaye, Paul Martin, Chris Pepper, Kare Tang, Ian Crozier, Graham Goode, Glenn Young, Sanjiv Petkar, Ed Langford, Nicholas John Linker, Adrian Rozkovec, Aldo Rinaldi, Zaheer Yousef, Nigel Lever, Russell Denman, Glen Young, Ian Williams, Andrew McGavigan, on behalf of the Protect-Pace trial investigators, Effect of right ventricular pacing lead site on left ventricular function in patients with high-grade atrioventricular block: results of the Protect-Pace study, European Heart Journal, Volume 36, Issue 14, 7 April 2015, Pages 856–862, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehu304
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Abstract
Chronic right ventricle (RV) apical (RVA) pacing is standard treatment for an atrioventricular (AV) block but may be deleterious to left ventricle (LV) systolic function. Previous clinical studies of non-apical pacing have produced conflicting results. The aim of this randomized, prospective, international, multicentre trial was to compare change in LV ejection fraction (LVEF) between right ventricular apical and high septal (RVHS) pacing over a 2-year study period.
We randomized 240 patients (age 74 ± 11 years, 67% male) with a high-grade AV block requiring >90% ventricular pacing and preserved baseline LVEF >50%, to receive pacing at the RVA (n = 120) or RVHS (n = 120). At 2 years, LVEF decreased in both the RVA (57 ± 9 to 55 ± 9%, P = 0.047) and the RVHS groups (56 ± 10 to 54 ± 10%, P = 0.0003). However, there was no significant difference in intra-patient change in LVEF between confirmed RVA (n = 85) and RVHS (n = 83) lead position (P = 0.43). There were no significant differences in heart failure hospitalization, mortality, the burden of atrial fibrillation, or plasma brain natriutetic peptide levels between the two groups. A significantly greater time was required to place the lead in the RVHS position (70 ± 25 vs. 56 ± 24 min, P < 0.0001) with longer fluoroscopy times (11 ± 7 vs. 5 ± 4 min, P < 0.0001).
In patients with a high-grade AV block and preserved LV function requiring a high percentage of ventricular pacing, RVHS pacing does not provide a protective effect on left ventricular function over RVA pacing in the first 2 years.
ClinicalTrials.gov number NCT00461734.
- atrial fibrillation
- atrioventricular block
- ventricular function, left
- left ventricular ejection fraction
- heart failure
- left ventricle
- right ventricle
- fluoroscopy
- heart ventricle
- peptides
- plasma
- systole
- brain
- mortality
- ejection fraction
- ventricular pacing
- program for all-inclusive care of the elderly
- high grade atrioventricular block