PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Long-term performance of an atrial lead capable of accelerometer based detection of cardiac contractility in patients receiving cardiac resynchronisation therapy.

  • Thomas Senoner,
  • Fabian Barbieri,
  • Georg Semmler,
  • Agne Adukauskaite,
  • Andrea Rubatscher,
  • Wilfried Schgör,
  • Markus Stühlinger,
  • Axel Bauer,
  • Bernhard Erich Pfeifer,
  • Lukas Fiedler,
  • Franz Xaver Roithinger,
  • Florian Hintringer,
  • Alois Suessenbacher,
  • Christian Georg Wollmann,
  • Wolfgang Dichtl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222269
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 9
p. e0222269

Abstract

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OBJECTIVES:To evaluate the long-term performance of the SonRtip atrial lead. BACKGROUND:To optimize atrioventricular and interventricular timing and thereby potentially improving cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) responder rates, a lead integrated technology and a cardioverter/defibrillator-based algorithm measuring peak endocardial acceleration have been introduced. Long-term performance of the atrial lead (SonRtip PS55D, Sorin/MicroPort CRM, Italy) embedded with such a sensor has not been reported so far. METHODS:Between 2012 and 2018, 143 patients underwent implantation of the SonRtip atrial lead in four Austrian medical centers. Conventional bipolar atrial leads implanted during the same period in 526 patients receiving CRT were used as control cohort. RESULTS:Among 669 patients included in the study, 10 (1.5%) showed increased atrial pacing thresholds and/or decreased atrial sensing amplitudes and/or sudden increase in atrial lead impedance (above 3000 Ω) after an uneventful early postoperative period. Seven (70%) of the malfunctioning leads were SonRtip leads (p <0.001). Lead replacement was needed in 4.2% of SonRtip leads (six out of 143) and in 0.38% of all other conventional atrial leads (two out of 526) (p <0.001). Because of unaltered atrial sensing properties, a wait and see strategy was chosen in two patients-one of them with a SonRtip lead. The implanted atrial lead in the latter person experienced a sudden increase in pacing threshold (4V/0.35ms). CONCLUSIONS:While short-term safety and stable technical performance of the SonRtip atrial lead could be confirmed, our study found an unexpectedly high malfunction rate over a longer follow-up period.