Title: Device Therapy in Congestive Heart Failure
1Device Therapy in Congestive Heart Failure
Teresa Menendez Hood, M.D., F.A.C.C.
2Congestive Heart Failure
Annual Incidence
Heart Failure Prevalence
Annual Mortality
5.0 million
400,000
250,000
U.S.
- Up to 30 of CHF patients have an IVCD (80
with a LBBB) which has been linked to increases
in mortality and morbidity. - CHF is the leading cause hospitalizations in the
US and uses up 5 of the health care costs (1999
stats) - 1-2 of the population and 6 of the population
gt65 - Prevalence is on the rise.
3NYHA Class-evaluates the disability imposed on
the patient
Class I Asymptomatic heart failureejection
fraction (EF) lt40
Class II Mild symptomatic heart failure with
ordinary exertion
Class IV Symptomatic heart failure at rest
Class III Moderate symptomatic heart
failure with less than ordinary exertion
- The FDA and the ACC/AHA Guidelines have
approved biventricular pacing for class 3 and 4.
4Leading Causes of Death in the U.S.
Septicemia
You must combine deaths from all cancers to
outnumber the deaths from SCA each year.
Nephritis
Alzheimers Disease
Influenza/pneumonia
Diabetes
Accidents/injuries
Chronic lower respiratory diseases
Cerebrovascular disease
Other cardiac causes
Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA)
All other causes
All cancers
0
5
10
15
20
25
National Vital Statistics Report. Oct. 12,
200149(11). MMWR. State-specific mortality from
sudden cardiac death US 1999. Feb 15,
200251123-126.
5SCD Rates in CHF Patients with LV Dysfunction
12 months
16 months
41.4 months
27 months
13 months
45 months
6 months
Total Mortality 15-40 SCD accounts for 50
of the total deaths.
6SCD in Heart Failure
- QRS duration is an independent predictor of
mortality (gt140 ms) - Other factors are age, creatinine, EF, and HR
QRS
100
Duration
(msec)
lt90
90
90
120
-
-
Cumulative Survival
80
120
170
-
-
170
220
-
-
70
gt220
60
0
60
120
180
240
300
360
Days
.
7SCD in Heart Failure
- Degree of SCD risk by class
- Mortality in NYHA class II is 5 to 15
- 50 to 80 of the deaths are Sudden
- Mortality in NYHA class III is 20 to 50
- Up to 50 of the deaths are Sudden
- Mortality in NYHA class IV is 30 to 70
- 5 to 30 of deaths are Sudden
8Right Ventricular Pacing
- RV apex pacing is harmful in patients with LV
dysfunction - Paced LBBB
- Abnormal LV activation
- Reduced stroke volume
9RV pacing
- MADIT II (2002) had a survival benefit with the
ICD but in a subgroup analysis, there was an
increase in heart failure morbidity (more
hospitalizations) felt due to forced RV pacing
compared to controls in which no pacing was
present.
10MADIT II ComplicationsNew or Worsening HF
- RV pacing causes ventricular dysynchrony and may
lead to worsening HF. - Intrinsic ventricular activation is better for
ICD patients with left ventricular dysfunction
who do not need pacing. - lt10 of ICD patients have a Class I pacing
indication at the time of implant. - Physicians, when appropriate, should consider
programming of ICDs to avoid frequent RV pacing.
11 DAVID Dual Chamber and VVI Implantable
Defibrillator Trial
- ICD indication but no indication for a pacemaker
- Ef lt 40
- DDDR _at_ 70BPM versus VVI 40 BPM
12The Concept
- In most patients with an IVCD (QRS gt 130 ms) ,
the presence of atrial-biventricular (RV LV)
pacing will provide early stimulation to an
otherwise late segment of electrical activation
in the LV. - This should translate into an increase in the EF,
decrease of the LV dimension, improvement in the
QOL and NYHA class. - This may translate into an decrease in CHF
exacerbations , hospitalizations and a decrease
in mortality.
13The Proof
- 19941997 Mechanistic and both short- and
longer-term observational studies. Studies
initially used epicardial leads placed by
thoracotomy or thorascope. - The first BiV pacer was implanted in 1994
- 19981999 Randomized, controlled studies to
assess exercise capacity, functional status, and
quality of life. - There was development of transvenous leads via
the coronary sinus in to get to the LV.
Cohen TJ, Klein J. J Inva20021448-53.
14The Proof
- 20002005 Randomized, controlled trials to
assess combined mortality and CHF
hospitalization. Also evaluated the combined
benefit of ICDs with CRT. - Future Identify patients who will benefit from
CRT along with the QRS duration.This will use
echocardiographic markers of asynchrony. - 20 of patients do not respond to therapy in
clinical trials with a wide QRS and 50 patients
with a narrow QRS/CHF have asynchrony on echo and
may benefit from this therapy. - If the QRS is lt 150 then the chances of
responding to BiVP is 5. It will be in this
patient group of QRS of 120-150 ms where
preselection of responders will be most valuable.
15The Cardiac Resynchronization Clinical Trials
- PATH-CHF, MUSTIC, MIRACLE, COMPANION, and
CARE-HF - This is not a complete list of all the CRT
trials and the dates given are when the trial
results were published.
16Cumulative Enrollment in Cardiac
Resynchronization Randomized Trials
17PATH-CHF 1999
Pacing Therapy for Congestive Heart Failure
- This was the first multicenter trial and used the
standard endocardial RV lead and an epicardial LV
lead via thoracotomy or thorascope - Single blinded RCT
- 53 centers in Europe
- 41 patients
18PATH-CHF
19PATH-CHF
- Primary endpoints
- Peak VO2
- Six-minute walk distance
- Secondary endpoints
- Minnesota Living with Heart Failure score (QOL)
- NYHA class
- EF
- Trend towards decrease in Hospitalizations
- Acute hemodynamic testing revealed that the
lateral and posterolateral walls were the best
target sites. - The best responders were those with QRSgt150 ,
long PR and dP/dt lt 700 mm Hg/s
20MUSTIC 2001Multicenter Stimulation in CM
- European study with 67 patients
- QRSgt150, CHF, EF lt35
- BiVP versus backup VVI pacing at 40 BPM
- Increase in 6 minute walk time , QOL and Peak
VO2 with BiVP and persisted for up to 12 months - 60 decrease in CHF hospitalizations
- First to use endocardial LV leads via the CS
- No significant change in mortality, but a trend
towards an improvement. - Acute hemodynamic studies showed the mid lateral
wall to be the best site
21MIRACLE2002Multi-center In Sync Randomized
Clinical Evaluation Trial
- Double blinded RCT
- First US trial
- Class 3 or 4, on OPT, QRS gt130 ms, EFlt35
- Enrollment of 453 patients
22MIRACLE
23MIRACLE
Nonresponders older, ischemic CM, no MR,
QRSlt150 Responders had shorter duration on CHF
and longer QRSgt155
24MIRACLE
- There was a decrease in hospitalizations of 50
at 6 months and a trend towards a decrease in
mortality. - All other primary and secondary endpoints were
met 6 minute walk time, peak Vo2, QOL, EF , NYHA
class, LVEDD - Magnitude of improvement not influenced by
degree of QRS shortening with BiVP (average in
all was 20msec)
25FDA Approval
- The first CRT device was approved by the FDA in
September 2001 . - The first CRT with an ICD was approved by the FDA
in May 2002 .
26The primary ICD prevention trials
- MADIT 1 1996 required a positive EP study
- MUSTT 1999 required a positive EP study
- Madit 2 2002 prior MI (ischemic cardiomyopathy)
and EFlt30 (no EP study required) 60 had CHF
and 50 had QRS gt 120 ms resulted in a 31
decrease risk of death and halted prematurely due
to the positive effect of the ICD resulted in
the FDA approving the ICD for primary prevention
this patient population, but only those with a
QRS gt 120 ms.
27The primary ICD prevention trial
- SCD-Heft 2005 The SCD-Heft trial resulted in FDA
approval of the ICD January 2005 in patients with
CHF and EFlt35 that included both ischemic and
nonischemic cardiomyopathy for primary prevention
without a positive EP study or ventricular ectopy
. No QRS cutoff was required.
28ACC/AHA/NASPE 2002 Indications for Cardiac
Resynchronization Therapy
- Class II a ( Level A) Indication for
Biventricular Pacing in Dilated Cardiomyopathy - Biventricular pacing in medically refractory,
symptomatic NYHA Class III/IV patients with
idiopathic dilated or ischemic cardiomyopathy,
prolonged QRS interval (?130 msec), LV end
diastolic diameter ?55mm, and LVEF ?35
29COMPANION2004
Comparison of Medical Therapy, Pacing and
Defibrillation in Heart Failure
30COMPANION
- Enrolled 1520 patients class 3 and 4, QRS gt120ms
- Primary endpoint death or hospitalization for
any cause - CRT met the primary endpoints and the CRT /- ICD
significantly reduces mortality - This was the first to show mortality benefit
from CRT alone - Showed that patients with CRT also benefit from
ICD therapy - OPT had SCD in 36, 23 in CRT and 2.9 in
CRTICD
31COMPANION
- CRT arm had 20 reduction in mortality and
hospitalization over OPT arm but it was not
statistically significant - Significant reduction in CRT-ICD arm of 40 for
mortality over OPT arm (19 in OPT and 11 in
CRT-ICD group) - Study was halted prematurely due to its positive
benefit. - Mean follow up was 16 months
32CARE-HF March 2005
- The effect of cardiac resynchronization on
morbidity and mortality in heart failure in 813
patients in Europe ( prospective multicenter RCT)
with completed enrollment by 2002 - Large patient size and length of trial (average
follow up of 29 months) allowed ability to asses
effects of CRT - Looked at CRT alone (no ICD)
- Patients with class 3 or 4, EF lt 35, QRS gt120 ms
- There was a 37 reduced mortality or first
hospitalization for a cardiac cause compared to
OPT
33CARE-HF
- All endpoints were met EF, NYHA, QOL, BNP, Echo
and hemodynamic parameters - 33 of the deaths in the CRT group were due to
SCD - For every 9 devices, one death and 3
hospitalizations were prevented - Echo criteria in patients with QRS 120-149ms to
look for asynchrony (had to have 2 of 3) - Aortic pre-ejection delay of gt 140 ms ( onset of
QRS to Aortic ejection) - Interventricular mechanical delay of gt40 ms (
RV-LV) - Delayed activation of the postero-lateral LV wall
(gt50ms)
34RA Anatomy
35Anatomical Challenges
- Enlarged right atrium
- Abnormal CS location
- Presence of valves in CS
- Altered CS angulation
- Acute branch take offs
- Tortuous vessel anatomy
36CRT Procedure and Device Related Risks relative
to CS placement
- CS lead dislogdement 8
- CS dissection or perforation 5
- Failure of lead placement 8
- Phrenic nerve stimulation 2
- ALL other risks associated with pacer or ICD
implantation and anesthesia in these patients.
37CS Leads they now come in many shapes and sizes
and the the OTW system
38Achieving Cardiac Resynchronization
Goal Atrial synchronous biventricular
pacing Transvenous approach for left ventricular
lead via coronary sinus Back-up epicardial
approach
39 RAO is best to distinguish BASE position from
APEX
40ANTERIOR
Anterior
LAO is best to distinguish LATERAL position
from SEPTAL
LATERAL
SEPTAL
Posterior Lateral
INFERIOR
41LAO
42The implant
- 3 separate sticks via Seldinger technique in the
subclavian vein -can be done from the right but
it is more difficult. - Use standard peel back sheaths for the RA and
RV leads - The RV lead is positioned first - could develop
CHB or VT so it is good to have this in (screw-in
or tined) - Advance the long guide sheath into the RA ( not
to the CS) - Advance a Coronary Sinus EP catheter via the long
guide sheath into the CS the LAO is the best
point towards the spine. - Advance the sheath while pulling back on the CS
catheter to get the sheath into the CS - Some would use dye at this point to look at the
anatomy of the CS and its branches
43The implant
- Advance the CS lead with or without the OTW
system and make sure you place it in a
mid/lateral or posterolateral position. Never go
where the LAD would be but where the obtuse
marginals would be. - Test the CS lead including at 10 volts for
phrenic nerve stimulation - Pull back on the sheath until it is out of the
OS, then peel it out with a retention guide wire
in the CS-be careful about dislodgement - Position the atrial lead in the RAA (screw-in or
tined) - Test the ICD with induction of VF twice separated
by 3-5 minutes can do at a later time if the
time is gt 4 hours or the patient has been
unstable in any way. Always use a high energy
device in these patients.
44The 3 levels of asynchrony
- Intraventricular asynchrony is best treated by
placing the LV lead in the best anatomic
location-usually the lateral or posterolateral
(proven my multiple studies). Get the LV working. - Interventricular asynchrony is dealt with by
adjusting the V-V interval. Get the RV and the LV
to work together. - A-V asynchrony is dealt with by adjusting the A-V
interval. Get the atria and the ventricles
working together.
45 Posterolateral or Lateral walls are the best
with LBBB where the septum contracts first and
then the lateral wall last.
Paced at most mechanically delayed LV site
Paced at any other LV site
0
10
P0.04
-5
9
8
-9.2
-10
6
Improvement
-15
4
-20
2
-25
-28.4
P0.04
2
-30
0
Change in LV End-systolic Volume ml
Change in LVEF
46CRT and Tissue Doppler Imaging -a measure of
intraventricular delay
- Measures dyssynchronous (delayed) contraction
patterns _at_ different areas of the ventricle - Measure from the onset of the QRS to the peak
systolic shortening of that segment - Defined as a segment with gt 50 ms delay this
indicates intraventricular delay or asynchrony by
ECHO criteria - Colors green-yellow-red (the longest delay of
gt300 ms)
47AV Delay Optimization Methods
- Electrocardiographic
- COMPANION trial method
- Echocardiographic (combined)
- Aortic velocity time integral (VTI) methods
- Mitral velocity Doppler methodsE and A waves
- Ritter formula
- Hemodynamic measurements
- Pulse pressure method
- dP/dtmax method
48COMPANION Method QRS lt 150
Intrinsic QRS duration QRS 140 ms
Intracardiac AV interval AS to VS 300 ms
Sensed AV Delay
49COMPANION Method QRS gt150
Intrinsic QRS duration QRS 180 ms
Intracardiac AV interval AS to VS 240 ms
Sensed AV Delay
50Aortic VTI Method
- Objective
- Identify the AV Delay that yields the maximum
cardiac output as determined by an aortic VTI
measurement - Procedure
- Obtain continuous wave Doppler echo of aortic
valve outflow to obtain VTI measurement - Record VTI values over a range of programmed AV
Delays - Program the AV Delay value that yields the
maximum aortic VTI
51Mitral Velocity Doppler Echo Method
- Objective
- Identify the AV Delay that maximizes LV filling
using mitral velocity echocardiographic
measurements1 - Procedure 1 A-wave cutoff
- Obtain transmitral Doppler echo at a long
programmed AV Delay during ventricular pacing - Shorten the programmed AV Delay by 10-20 ms until
the echo Doppler A-wave becomes truncated (A
wave is atrial contraction) - Lengthen the programmed AV Delay back to the
value where there is no A-wave cutoff. This
timing should enable ventricular contraction to
occur just at the end of atrial systole
52V-V Timing synchronize the RV and the LV
- The best V-V setting by measuring the RVOT and
LVOT via PW Doppler - V-V above gt 40 ms is considered abnormal
- In normals, the RV will contract before the LV
in the heart by -20 ms - LV and RV have different outputs in the newer
devices that allow sequential instead of
simultaneous delivery of output and thus allow
for this to be programmable. -
53Therapy for Heart Failure
- EF lt40then need to evaluate patient for
etiology of cardiomyopathy and begin to optimize
medical therapy. - If the patient is Class 3 or 4 , has a QRSgt 130
ms, has had a documented EFlt35 for gt9 months
then consider for CRT-ICD.
54Stages of Heart Failure
55Summary
- Large number of patients studied in multiple
RCTs. - CRT improves quality of life, exercise capacity,
functional capacity, EF, peak VO2. - CRT reduces the risk of mortality, worsening HF,
and hospitalizations for CHF. - CRT ICD significantly reduces risk of mortality.
56Thank you