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Patients with pacemakers often have undiagnosed heart muscle weakness. When a pacemaker battery has run down, it is easily replaced by a short procedure. In those with heart muscle weakness, who use their pacemaker most of the time (rather than acting just as a back-up) the investigators want to find out if adding a further lead to their pacemaker system improves their heart's function, kidney function and exercise capacity.
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Background
Chronic heart failure Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a common syndrome of breathlessness and fatigue associated with left ventricular systolic dysfunction. It affects 2% of individuals between 50 and 60 years of age, and increases in prevalence to 10% over the age of 80 years.
Cardiac resynchronisation therapy Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) involves the implantation of a pacemaker capable of stimulating the heart (specifically the left ventricle) from both the front of the heart, the right ventricle RV (as is usual with conventional pacemakers) and from the back of the heart (known as the lateral wall) via the coronary sinus, aiming to improve the timing of cardiac contraction (dyssynchrony) and hence the pumping function of the heart in order to improve symptoms of breathlessness and fatigue.
Early data in patients with left bundle branch block and severe heart failure, suggested improved exercise capacity and left ventricular function. More recent data have demonstrated not only improved symptoms, but also reduced hospital admissions, and improved overall mortality.
Current guidelines drawn up using the data from randomised trials, suggest that CRT should be offered to patients with left bundle branch block with a QRS > 150ms and severe (class III and IV) heart failure despite optimal medical therapy. Patients with a QRS duration of between 120 and 150ms should be assessed for mechanical dyssynchrony before being offered a device.
Heart failure in the pacemaker population
The effects of upgrading conventional pacemaker systems to those capable of delivering resynchronisation therapy have been incompletely investigated. There have only been retrospective series examining the impact of upgrading conventional pacemakers to CRT systems. Early data demonstrated the safety of adapting standard pacemakers to provide biventricular stimulation and suggested improvements in LV function. One study, involving 20 patients with chronic atrial fibrillation and AV nodal ablation, showed that adding an LV lead was associated with improved LV systolic function, reduced hospitalisations and improved quality of life. Other reports examining the impact of CRT in patients with chronic RV pacing on acute echocardiographic variables of LV systolic function and reductions in electromechanical delay and beneficial haemodynamic effects of biventricular pacing in 15 and 20 patients with pre-existing RV pacemakers. More recently a cross-over study of 44 patients requiring generator replacement demonstrated improved symptoms and LV function with 3 months of CRT when compared with 3 months of RV pacing. There are also data from small series demonstrating improvements of echocardiographic strain variables (in 12 patients) and symptoms in patients with significant CHF upgraded from conventional pacemakers to CRT systems
Aim of this study We propose to randomise 50 patients with ventricular dysfunction listed for pulse generator replacement to receive either a standard right ventricular generator replacement, or to be upgraded to a resynchronisation device. These patients will then be reassessed at six months to establish the effects of this policy on left ventricular function and exercise capacity.
Experimental design
Patients All patients will have undergone an echocardiogram, exercise test and renal function check as part of the survey of all patients undergoing pacemaker battery change at Leeds General Infirmary. If reducing or avoiding RV pacing to below 80% is not possible, patients with LV dysfunction (LVEF < 50%) will be invited to participate in the randomised controlled trial of standard generator replacement or upgrade to CRT.
Procedures Patients will then be randomised to receive either an upgraded system or a pacemaker generator replacement as standard. Following the implant, subjects will be seen at 6 weeks and three months in the pacemaker clinic as is usual. The 6 monthly visit will include repeat echocardiography, an exercise test with metabolic gas exchange, repeat blood tests, 24 hour urine collection and symptom assessment.
Endpoints The primary endpoint will be an improvement in left ventricular function as measured by left by echocardiography. Secondary endpoints will include changes in exercise capacity, renal function and quality of life score.
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50 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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