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Atrial Support Pacing in Heart Failure: Results from the Multicenter PEGASUS CRT Trial
Authors:DAVID O MARTIN M.D.   M.P.H.  JOHN D DAY M.D.   F.H.R.S.  PETER Y LAI M.D.  ALLAN L MURPHY M.B.B.S.  HEMAL M NAYAK M.D.  ROLLO P VILLAREAL M.D.  STANISLAV WEINER M.D.  STACIA M KRAUS M.P.H.  KIRA Q STOLEN Ph.D.  MICHAEL R GOLD M.D.   Ph.D.   F.H.R.S
Affiliation:1. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, USA;2. Department of Cardiology, Intermountain Medical Center, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA;3. Department of Cardiology, Memorial Medical Center/Gould Medical Group, Modesto, California, USA;4. Department of Medicine, Riverside Regional Medical Center, Newport News, Virginia;5. USA;6. Department of Medicine, University of Chicago Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, USA;7. Department of Cardiology, Self Regional Healthcare, Greenwood, South Carolina, USA;8. Department of Cardiology, Tyler Cardiovascular Consultants, Tyler, Texas, USA;9. Department of Biostatistics, The Integra Group, Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, USA;10. Clinical Affairs, Boston Scientific, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA;11. Department of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Abstract:Atrial Pacing in Heart Failure. Introduction: Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) efficacy trials to date used atrial‐synchronous biventricular pacing wherein there is no or minimal atrial pacing. However, bradycardia and chronotropic incompetence are common in this patient population. This trial was designed to evaluate the effect of atrial support pacing among heart failure patients receiving a CRT defibrillator. Methods and Results: PEGASUS CRT was a multicenter, 3‐arm, randomized study. At 6 weeks, patients were randomized to DDD mode at a lower rate of 40 bpm (DDD‐40; control arm), or one of the following 2 treatment arms: DDD‐70, or DDDR‐40. The primary endpoint was a clinical composite endpoint that included all‐cause mortality, heart failure events, NYHA functional class, and patient global self‐assessment. Subjects were classified as improved, unchanged, or worsened at 12 months. There were 1,433 patients randomized, of whom 66% were male, mean age was 67 ± 11 years, and mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 23 ± 7%. The average follow‐up time was 10.5 ± 3.5 months and 1,309 patients contributed to the primary endpoint. No significant differences were observed in the composite endpoint between either of the 2 treatment arms compared to the control arm (P>0.05 for both comparisons). Additionally, there were no differences among the groups in mortality or heart failure events. Conclusion: In advanced heart failure patients treated with CRT, atrial support pacing did not improve clinical outcomes compared to atrial tracking. However, atrial pacing did not adversely affect mortality or heart failure events. (J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol, Vol. 23, pp. 1317‐1325, December 2012)
Keywords:atrial pacing  cardiac resynchronization therapy  heart failure  implantable cardioverter defibrillator  mortality
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