Journal of Arrhythmia (Aug 2021)

Anti‐tachycardia pacing for non‐fast and fast ventricular tachycardias in individual Japanese patients: From Nippon‐storm study

  • Masaomi Chinushi,
  • Osamu Saitoh,
  • Hiroshi Furushima,
  • Yoshifusa Aizawa,
  • Takashi Noda,
  • Takashi Nitta,
  • Tohru Ohe,
  • Takashi Kurita

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/joa3.12572
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 4
pp. 1038 – 1045

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Anti‐tachycardia pacing (ATP) delivered from an implantable device is a useful tool to terminate ventricular tachycardia (VT). But its real‐world efficacy for those patients having multiple VTs with varying VT rates has not been fully studied. Methods Using the Nippon‐storm study database, efficacy of patient‐by‐patient basis ATP programing for Japanese patients having both non‐fast (120‐187 bpm) and fast VT (≥188 bpm) was assessed. According to the useful criteria of ≥50% success termination by ATP, patients were divided into three subgroups; success ≥50% for both non‐fast and fast VT (both useful), ≥50% only for non‐fast VT (non‐fast VT useful), or ≥50% for neither non‐fast nor fast VT (neither useful). Results During a median follow‐up of 28 months, ATP terminated 184 of the 203 non‐fast VT episodes (91%) and 86 of the 113 fast VT episodes (76%) in all 41 patients. In the patient‐by‐patient analysis, efficacy of ATP was not different between non‐fast and fast VT in most of the patients (36/41 = 88%); 32 patients were in the both useful and four other patients in the neither useful. Neither ischemic nor non‐ischemic structural heart disease was associated with the ATP efficacy, whereas LVEF more than 37.0% and non‐prescribed amiodarone were characteristics of the patients classified into the both useful. Conclusions ATP well terminated both non‐fast and fast VT occurring in individual Japanese patients with various structural heart diseases in the real‐world device treatment and this finding further supports ATP programing for all device tachycardia detection zones in most patients with multiple VTs.

Keywords