The present analysis showed that frequent deviations occurred when comparing the device settings at discharge from the pacemaker implant in clinical practice to the available guidelines on pacing mode selection. Analysis of 2-year outcomes in the OPTI-MIND study will provide an insight into whether specific physiological settings could improve the quality of pacing with a positive effect on patient outcome.
The main finding of this study is that temporary overdrive pacing at 90 bpm for 10 min starting just prior to device-classified AT/AF termination does not show a positive effect on the overall study population. However, when enabled in patients who suffer from a high percentage of ERAF, a significant reduction in the AT/AF burden could be demonstrated. Based on these findings, further prospective studies on a more targeted patient population are needed to confirm our results.
ABSTRACT. The aim was to observe the relationship of pacemaker programming and patients' outcome in an unselected population of recipients in real-world practice. Pacemaker programming at hospital discharge and at scheduled follow-up visits was recorded and classified as physiologic based on simple principles: avoidance of unnecessary ventricular stimulation in patients without atrioventricular block, avoidance of unnecessary atrial stimulation in those without sinus node dysfunction, rate increase in those with chronotropic incompetence, and avoidance of hypotension-related symptoms. All-cause 2-year mortality was the primary endpoint; atrial fibrillation (AF) episodes leading to unplanned visits/hospitalizations was the secondary endpoint. A total of 1740 patients were followed for 24 ± 3 months, 89% had DDD(R) pacemakers; physiologic programming was not associated with better survival, but it was associated with a lower incidence of AF episodes in the 810 patients with AV block as primary pacemaker indication (6.5% versus 11%, po0.01). Physiologic pacemaker programming occurred in only 41.4% of patients at hospital discharge; reprogramming towards a physiologic setting occurred in 8.7% at follow-up, mainly (76%) within the first 6 months. Physiologic programming is associated with a lower incidence of AF episodes in AV block patients beyond maintenance of AV synchrony. Proactive pacemaker behavior to increase physiologic programming should be considered, in view of physicians' reluctance to change programming from shipment settings.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.