Erschienen in:
14.02.2019
Prognostic impact of left ventricular ejection fraction in patients with electrical storm
verfasst von:
Julian Müller, Michael Behnes, Dominik Ellguth, Tobias Schupp, Gabriel Taton, Linda Reiser, Thomas Reichelt, Armin Bollow, Seung-Hyun Kim, Christian Barth, Ahmad Saleh, Jonas Rusnak, Kathrin Weidner, Christoph A. Nienaber, Kambis Mashayekhi, Muharrem Akin, Thomas Bertsch, Christel Weiß, Martin Borggrefe, Ibrahim Akin
Erschienen in:
Journal of Interventional Cardiac Electrophysiology
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Ausgabe 3/2019
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Abstract
Objectives
The study sought to assess retrospectively the prognostic impact of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) in patients with electrical storm (ES).
Background
Data regarding the prognostic impact of impaired LVEF in ES patients is rare.
Methods
Consecutive patients presenting with ES from 2002 to 2016 were included retrospectively. Patients with LVEF ≤ 35% were compared to patients with LVEF > 35%. The primary prognostic endpoint was long-term all-cause mortality, and secondary endpoints were rates of in-hospital mortality, rehospitalization, major adverse cardiac events (MACE), and ES recurrences (ES-R) at long-term follow-up.
Results
A total of 80 patients with ES were included at 2.5 years of follow-up. 69% of patients suffered from LVEF ≤ 35%. ES patients with LVEF ≤ 35% were associated with higher rates of the primary endpoint of all-cause mortality (53% versus 8%, log-rank p = 0.0001; HR 8.524; 95% CI 2.030–35.793, p = 0.003), as well as the secondary endpoints of MACE (53% versus 20%; log rank p = 0.011; HR 3.213, 95% CI 1.241–8.316, p = 0.016) and ES-R (35% versus 8%; log rank p = 0.019; HR 4.821, 95% CI 1.122–20.706, p = 0.034). Furthermore, ES patients with LVEF ≤ 35% showed higher rates of rehospitalization due to acute heart failure (24% versus 8%, statistical trend p = 0.096). Notably, ES patients with LVEF > 35% were associated with increased rates of rehospitalization due to ventricular tachycardia (36% versus 18%, statistical trend p = 0.083).
Conclusions
ES patients with LVEF ≤ 35% were associated with increased rates of all-cause mortality, MACE, ES-R and heart failure-related rehospitalization at long-term follow-up.
Condensed abstract
This study evaluated retrospectively the prognostic impact of LVEF in patients with ES. LVEF ≤ 35% was associated with increased long-term all-cause mortality (53% versus 8%; HR 8.524; 95% CI 2.030–35.793, p = 0.003), MACE (53% versus 20%; HR 3.213, 95% CI 1.241–8.316, p = 0.016), and ES recurrences (35% versus 8%; HR 4.821, 95% CI 1.122–20.706, p = 0.034), while trends were observed for higher rates of heart-failure related rehospitalization (24% versus 8%, p = 0.096) and MACE (49% versus 28%; p = 0.081).