Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease (Dec 2024)

Arrhythmia Detection in Atrioventricular, Single-Lead, Floating Atrial Dipole ICD Systems Compared with Conventional Single- and Dual-Chamber Defibrillators

  • Flora Diana Gausz,
  • Kom Nangob Manuela Lena,
  • Paul Emmanuel Gedeon,
  • Marton Miklos,
  • Attila Benak,
  • Gabor Bencsik,
  • Attila Makai,
  • Dora Kranyak,
  • Rita Beata Gagyi,
  • Robert Pap,
  • Laszlo Saghy,
  • Tamas Szili-Torok,
  • Mate Vamos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd11120386
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 386

Abstract

Read online

Background: An atrioventricular defibrillator system with a floating atrial dipole (VDD ICD) can provide atrial sensing by a single lead. Our aim was to compare the arrhythmia detection efficacy of VDD ICDs with conventional single- (VVI) and dual-chamber (DDD) defibrillators. Methods: Data from consecutive patients undergoing ICD implantation were retrospectively analyzed. The primary endpoint was the incidence of device-detected, new-onset atrial arrhythmias, while secondary endpoints were sensing parameters, complication rates, incidence of appropriate/inappropriate ICD therapy, arrhythmic/heart failure-related hospitalizations, and all-cause mortality. Results: A total of 256 patients (mean age 64 ± 12 years, male 75%, primary prophylaxis 28%, mean follow-up 3.7 ± 2.4 years) were included (VVI: 93, VDD: 94, DDD: 69). Atrial arrhythmia episodes were detected more frequently by VDD systems compared to VVI ICDs (aHR 7.087; 95% CI 2.371–21.183; p p = 0.200). The rate of inappropriate shocks was not different among the three ICD systems. Conclusion: VDD devices revealed an advantage in atrial arrhythmia detection compared to VVI ICDs and were non-inferior to DDD systems. Their main indication may be closer monitoring in high-risk patients with atrial arrhythmias to help therapy optimization and not the improvement of tachycardia discrimination.

Keywords