PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Defibrillation effectiveness and safety of the shock waveform used in a contemporary wearable cardioverter defibrillator: Results from animal and human studies.

  • Marye J Gleva,
  • Joseph Sullivan,
  • Thomas C Crawford,
  • Greg Walcott,
  • Ulrika Birgersdotter-Green,
  • Kelley R Branch,
  • Rahul N Doshi,
  • Kaisa Kivilaid,
  • Kelly Brennan,
  • Ron K Rowbotham,
  • Laura M Gustavson,
  • Jeanne E Poole

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0281340
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e0281340

Abstract

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IntroductionThe wearable cardioverter defibrillator (WCD) is used to protect patients at risk for sudden cardiac arrest. We examined defibrillation efficacy and safety of a biphasic truncated exponential waveform designed for use in a contemporary WCD in three animal studies and a human study.MethodsAnimal (swine) studies: #1: Efficacy comparison of a 170J BTE waveform (SHOCK A) to a 150J BTE waveform (SHOCK B) that approximates another commercially available waveform. Primary endpoint first shock success rate. #2: Efficacy comparison of the two waveforms at attenuated charge voltages in swine at three prespecified impedances. Primary endpoint first shock success rate. #3: Safety comparison of SHOCK A and SHOCK B in swine. Primary endpoint cardiac biomarker level changes baseline to 6 and 24 hours post-shock. Human Study: Efficacy comparison of SHOCK A to prespecified goal and safety evaluation. Primary endpoint cumulative first and second shock success rate. Safety endpoint adverse events.ResultsAnimal Studies #1: 120 VF episodes in six swine. First shock success rates for SHOCK A and SHOCK B were 100%; SHOCK A non-inferior to SHOCK B (entire 95% CI of rate difference above -10% margin, p ConclusionsThe BTE waveform effectively and safely terminated induced VF in swine and a small sample in humans.Trial registrationHuman study clinical trial registration: URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04132466.