Article

Resynchronization therapy in pediatric and congenital heart disease patients: an international multicenter study.

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology (impact factor: 14.16). 12/2005; 46(12):2277-83. DOI:10.1016/j.jacc.2005.05.096
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Our objective was to evaluate the short-term safety and efficacy of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in children.
Cardiac resynchronization therapy has been beneficial for adult patients with poor left ventricular function and intraventricular conduction delay. The efficacy of this therapy in the young and in those with congenital heart disease (CHD) has not yet been established.
This is a multi-center, retrospective evaluation of CRT in 103 patients from 22 institutions.
Median age at time of implantation was 12.8 years (3 months to 55.4 years). Median duration of follow-up was four months (22 days to 1 year). The diagnosis was CHD in 73 patients (71%), cardiomyopathy in 16 (16%), and congenital complete atrioventricular block in 14 (13%). The QRS duration before pacing was 166.1 +/- 33.3 ms, which decreased after CRT by 37.7 +/- 30.7 ms (p < 0.01). Pre-CRT systemic ventricular ejection fraction (EF) was 26.2 +/- 11.6%. The EF increased by 12.8 +/- 12.7 EF units with a mean EF after CRT of 39.9 +/- 14.8% (p < 0.05). Of 18 patients who underwent CRT while listed for heart transplantation, 3 improved sufficiently to allow removal from the transplant waiting list, 5 underwent transplant, 2 died, and 8 others are currently awaiting transplant.
Cardiac resynchronization therapy appears to offer benefit in pediatric and CHD patients who differ substantially from the adult populations in whom this therapy has been most thoroughly evaluated to date. Further studies looking at the long-term benefit of this therapy in this population are needed.

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Keywords

1 year
 
18 patients
 
73 patients
 
adult patients
 
adult populations
 
cardiac resynchronization therapy
 
CHD patients
 
congenital complete atrioventricular block
 
congenital heart disease
 
efficacy
 
heart transplantation
 
intraventricular conduction delay
 
long-term benefit
 
mean EF
 
Median age
 
Median duration
 
offer benefit
 
QRS duration
 
retrospective evaluation
 
ventricular function