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Editorial to implantable cardioverter defibrillator and cardiac resynchronization therapy use in New Zealand (ANZACS‐QI 33)

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Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is an important public health problem that accounts for 15%-20% of the total annual mortality in industrialized nations.1 Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is a useful tool for… Click to show full abstract

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is an important public health problem that accounts for 15%-20% of the total annual mortality in industrialized nations.1 Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is a useful tool for improving the prognosis of heart failure and/or ventricular arrhythmias. Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) provides a significant reduction in the morbidity and mortality in selected patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction and specific parameters of electrocardiographic evidence of dyssynchrony. Analyzing the national database regarding ICD/CRT was useful for understanding the national features of cardiac disease. In Japan, the Japan Cardiac Device Treatment Registry (JCDTR) was established in 2006 by the Japanese Heart Rhythm Society (JHRS) for a survey of the actual conditions in patients undergoing cardiac device implantations. In New Zealand, almost half of the ICDs were implanted for primary prevention, but in Japan only 42%. The primary prevention ratios reported in several international registries over the past decade are as follows: 46% in Denmark, 55% in Germany, 57% in the United Kingdom, 59% in Sweden, 62% in Spain, 63% in France, 82% in Italy, 73% in Canada, and 75% in the United States. Compared with the Western countries, the incidence of an ICD implantation for primary prevention has been relatively low in Asian countries. New Zealand is a multiethnic country and, though New Zealand belongs to the Asia region, about three-fourths of the patients are European. Interestingly, however, an ischemic etiology accounted for only 43% of the primary prevention and 56% of the secondary prevention indications. ICD implantations for primary prevention due to SCD have been largely affected by the nationality and religious reasons. In Japan, the major underlying diseases of patients in the JCDTR were ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM, 35%), dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM, 25%), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM, 8%), and Brugada syndrome (8%).2 The incidence of ICM was relatively lower than that of the Western countries, whereas the incidence of non-ischemic cardiomyopathy (NICM) was higher. The incidence of primary prevention among the individual diseases has varied. ICM was the most prevalent underlying condition in the patient cohort; however, the incidence of primary prevention was 33%, which was relatively lower than that of the other structural heart diseases. The incidence of primary prevention was relatively higher in patients with DCM (57%) and Brugada syndrome (47%). In the Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial (SCD-HeFT) that randomly assigned 2521 symptomatic individuals with either ischemic (n = 1310) or non-ischemic (n = 1211) heart failure and an left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ≤35% to a placebo, amiodarone, or ICD, compared with the placebo, the ICD group was associated with a 23% relative risk reduction and an absolute decrease of 7.2% in the all-cause mortality after 5 years of follow-up. However, that benefit was not statistically significant in the stratified analysis of NICM participants (hazard ratio [HR] 0.73, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.50-1.07; P = .06).3 Although individual ICD trials have failed to demonstrate a mortality benefit with prophylactic ICD implantations, multiple meta-analyses of primary prevention in ICD use for the NICM population as well as ICM have demonstrated a clinical efficacy. The Heart Rhythm Society (HRS) guidelines have continued to recommend prophylactic ICD implantations in patients with NICM, an LVEF ≤35%, and NYHA Class II-III heart failure despite optimal medical therapy. However, the recent Danish Study to Assess the Efficacy of ICDs in Patients with Non-ischemic Heart Failure on Mortality (Danish) study also demonstrated that there was no clinical benefit of primary prevention in patients with NICM.4 Other recent trials also demonstrated similar results, and therefore, the number of ICD implantations in patients with NICM might be gradually decreasing in response to these various negative results in the near feature; however, the evaluation of the SCD risk stratification in patients with NICM will become a more clinically important issue for primary prevention. In a pre-specified analysis from the DANISH trial, the survival benefit from an ICD implantation was seen only in patients ≤70 years of age. Among the patients ≥70 years of age, the rate of non-sudden death was nearly twice as high as that in the younger population, and no mortality benefit was seen with an ICD implantation. As a result of this age interaction, the widespread use of cardioprotective therapies including CRT, and overlap of the mortality benefit to a prophylactic ICD implantation, clinicians are critically evaluating the evolution of heart failure management, ICD implantations, and the SCD risk stratification in NICM. As a result, a refined approach of risk stratification that selects patients at the

Keywords: heart failure; icd; mortality; primary prevention; prevention

Journal Title: Journal of Arrhythmia
Year Published: 2020

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