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Impact of pacemaker longevity on expected device replacement rates: Results from computer simulations based on a multicenter registry (ESSENTIAL). | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the battery replacement rate in pacemaker recipients, focusing on how the device's longevity impacts this rate.
  • The research analyzed data from 542 patients, revealing that younger patients and certain health conditions had a higher likelihood of needing replacements.
  • Overall, about 25% of patients aged 70 and older are projected to require a second device, indicating that factors like age, gender, and health condition significantly influence replacement rates.

Article Abstract

Background: The rate of device replacement in pacemaker recipients has not been investigated in detail.

Hypothesis: Current pacemakers with automatic management of atrial and ventricular pacing output provide sufficient longevity to minimize replacement rate.

Methods: We considered a cohort of 542 pacemaker patients (age 78 ± 9 years, 60% male, 71% de-novo implants) and combined 1-month projected device longevity with survival data and late complication rate in a 3-state Markov model tested in several Monte Carlo computer simulations. Predetermined subgroups were: age < or ≥ 70; gender; primary indication to cardiac pacing.

Results: At the 1-month follow-up the reported projected device longevity was 153 ± 45 months. With these values the proportion of patients expected to undergo a device replacement due to battery depletion was higher in patients aged <70 (49.9%, range 32.1%-61.9%) than in age ≥70 (24.5%, range 19.9%-28.8%); in women (39.9%, range 30.8%-48.1%) than in men (32.0%, range 24.7%-37.5%); in sinus node dysfunction (41.5%, range 30.2%-53.0%) than in atrio-ventricular block (33.5%, range 27.1-38.8%) or atrial fibrillation with bradycardia (27.9%, range 18.5%-37.0%). The expected replacement rate was inversely related to the assumed device longevity and depended on age class: a 50% increase in battery longevity implied a 5% reduction of replacement rates in patients aged ≥80.

Conclusions: With current device technology 1/4 of pacemaker recipients aged ≥70 are expected to receive a second device in their life. Replacement rate depends on age, gender, and primary indication owing to differences in patients' survival expectancy. Additional improvements in device service time may modestly impact expected replacement rates especially in patients ≥80 years.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6490086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/clc.23003DOI Listing

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