Willy Kevin, Köbe Julia, Reinke Florian, Rath Benjamin, Ellermann Christian, Wolfes Julian, Wegner Felix K, Leitz Patrick R, Lange Philipp S, Eckardt Lars, Frommeyer Gerrit
Clinic for Cardiology II: Electrophysiology, University Hospital Münster, 48149 Münster, Germany.
J Pers Med. 2022 Jul 28;12(8):1240. doi: 10.3390/jpm12081240.
Background: Decision-making in primary prevention is not always trivial and many clinical scenarios are not reflected in current guidelines. To help evaluate a patient’s individual risk, a new score to predict the benefit of an implantable defibrillator (ICD) for primary prevention, the MADIT-ICD benefit score, has recently been proposed. The score tries to predict occurrence of ventricular arrhythmias and non-arrhythmic death based on data from four previous MADIT trials. We aimed at examining its usefulness in a large single-center register of S-ICD patients with various underlying cardiomyopathies. Methods and results: All S-ICD patients with a primary preventive indication for ICD implantation from our large single-center database were included in the analysis (n = 173). During a follow-up of 1227 ± 978 days, 27 patients developed sustained ventricular arrhythmias, while 6 patients died for non-arrhythmic reasons. There was a significant correlation for patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) (n = 29, p = 0.04) to the occurrence of ventricular arrhythmia. However, the occurrence of ventricular arrhythmias could not sufficiently be predicted by the MADIT-ICD VT/VF score (p = 0.3) in patients with (n = 142, p = 0.19) as well as patients without structural heart disease (n = 31, p = 0.88) and patients with LV-EF < 35%. Of the risk factors included in the risk score calculation, only non-sustained ventricular tachycardias were significantly associated with sustained ventricular arrhythmias (p = 0.02). Of note, non-arrhythmic death could effectively be predicted by the proposed non-arrhythmic mortality score as part of the benefit score (p = 0.001, r = 0.3) also mainly driven by ICM patients. Age, diabetes mellitus, and a BMI < 23 kg/m2 were key predictors of non-arrhythmic death implemented in the score. Conclusion: The MADIT-ICD benefit score adds a new option to evaluate expected benefit of ICD implantation for primary prevention. In a large S-ICD cohort of primary prevention, the value of the score was limited to patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy. Future research should evaluate the performance of the score in different subgroups and compare it to other risk scores to assess its value for daily clinical practice.
一级预防中的决策并非总是简单易行,许多临床情况并未在当前指南中得到体现。为了帮助评估患者的个体风险,最近提出了一种新的用于预测植入式除颤器(ICD)一级预防获益的评分系统——MADIT-ICD获益评分。该评分试图根据之前四项MADIT试验的数据来预测室性心律失常和非心律失常性死亡的发生情况。我们旨在研究其在一个包含各种潜在心肌病的大型单中心S-ICD患者登记系统中的实用性。
我们将来自大型单中心数据库的所有有ICD植入一级预防指征的S-ICD患者纳入分析(n = 173)。在1227±978天的随访期间,27例患者发生了持续性室性心律失常,6例患者死于非心律失常原因。缺血性心肌病(ICM)患者(n = 29,p = 0.04)与室性心律失常的发生存在显著相关性。然而,MADIT-ICD室速/室颤评分在有结构性心脏病的患者(n = 142,p = 0.19)、无结构性心脏病的患者(n = 31,p = 0.88)以及左室射血分数(LV-EF)<35%的患者中,均不能充分预测室性心律失常的发生(p = 0.3)。在风险评分计算中纳入的危险因素中,只有非持续性室性心动过速与持续性室性心律失常显著相关(p = 0.02)。值得注意的是,作为获益评分一部分的拟议非心律失常死亡率评分能够有效预测非心律失常性死亡(p = 0.001,r = 0.3),这也主要由ICM患者驱动。年龄、糖尿病和体重指数(BMI)<23kg/m²是该评分中实施的非心律失常性死亡的关键预测因素。
MADIT-ICD获益评分为评估ICD植入一级预防的预期获益增加了一个新选项。在一个大型的一级预防S-ICD队列中,该评分的价值仅限于缺血性心肌病患者。未来的研究应评估该评分在不同亚组中的表现,并将其与其他风险评分进行比较,以评估其在日常临床实践中的价值。