Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

download Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

of 8

Transcript of Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    1/19

    www.medscape.org

    This article is a CME/CE certified activity. To earn credit for this activity visit:

    http://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/803124

    CME/CEInformation

    CME/CE Released: 04/30/2013 ; Reviewed and Renewed: 06/16/2014 ; Valid for credit through 06/16/2015

    Target Audience

    This activity is intended for electrophysiologists, interventional cardiologists, cardiac surgeons, general cardiologists,

    internists, critical care specialists, cardiology nurses, and other allied healthcare professionals.

    Goal

    The goal of this activity is to provide strategies with clinical tools and techniques to appropriately risk stratify and optimize

    primary prevention strategies for patients at high risk of sudden cardiac death.

    Learning Objectives

    Upon completion of this activity, participants will be able to:

    Identify persistent treatment gaps within the heart failure population1.

    Evaluate potential mechanisms underlying the risk for sudden death and heart failure2.

    Assess the role of implantable and wearable cardiac defibrillators to address the risk of sudden cardiac death in

    patients with ischemic and nonischemic heart failure

    3.

    Credits Available

    Physicians- maximum of 0.50AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)

    Nurses- 0.50ANCC Contact Hour(s)(0 contact hours are in the area of pharmacology)

    All other healthcare professionals completing continuing education credit for this activity will be issued a certificate of

    participation.

    Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

    Accreditation Statements

    For Physicians

    Medscape, LLC is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing

    medical education for physicians.

    Medscape, LLC designates this enduring material for a maximum of 0.50AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s). Physicians

    should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

    Medscape, LLC staff have disclosed that they have no relevant financial relationships.

    Contact This Provider

    For Nurses

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    2/19

    Faculty and Disclosures

    Medscape, LLC is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's

    Commission on Accreditation.

    Awarded 0.50 contact hour(s) of continuing nursing education for RNs and APNs; none of these credits is in the area of

    pharmacology.

    Accredited status does not imply endorsement by Medscape, LLC or ANCC of any commercial products discussed in

    conjunction with the educational activity.

    Contact This Provider

    For questions regarding the content of this activity, contact the accredited provider for this CME/CE activity noted above. For

    technical assistance, contact [email protected]

    Instructions for Participation and Credit

    There are no fees for participating in or receiving credit for this online educational activity. For information on applicability and

    acceptance of continuing education credit for this activity, please consult your professional licensing board.

    This activity is designed to be completed within the time designated on the title page; physicians should claim only those

    credits that reflect the time actually spent in the activity. To successfully earn credit, participants must complete the activity

    online during the valid credit period that is noted on the title page. To receiveAMA PRA Category 1 Credit, you must

    receive a minimum score of 70% on the post-test.

    Follow these steps to earn CME/CE credit*:

    Read the target audience, learning objectives, and author disclosures.1.

    Study the educational content online or printed out.2.

    Online, choose the best answer to each test question. To receive a certificate, you must receive a passing score as

    designated at the top of the test. We encourage you to complete the Activity Evaluation to provide feedback for future

    programming.

    3.

    You may now view or print the certificate from your CME/CE Tracker. You may print the certificate but you cannot alter it.

    Credits will be tallied in your CME/CE Tracker and archived for 6 years; at any point within this time period you can print out thetally as well as the certificates from the CME/CE Tracker.

    *The credit that you receive is based on your user profile.

    Hardware/Software Requirements

    To access activities, users will need:

    A computer with an Internet connection.

    Internet Explorer 7.x or higher, Firefox 4.x or higher, Safari 2.x or higher, or any other W3C standards compliant

    browser.

    Adobe Flash Playerand/or an HTML5 capable browser may be required for video or audio playback.

    Occasionally other additional software may be required such as PowerPointorAdobe Acrobat Reader.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    3/19

    As an organization accredited by the ACCME, Medscape, LLC, requires everyone who is in a position to control the content of

    an education activity to disclose all relevant financial relationships with any commercial interest. The ACCME defines "relevant

    financial relationships" as financial relationships in any amount, occurring within the past 12 months, including financial

    relationships of a spouse or life partner, that could create a conflict of interest.

    Medscape, LLC, encourages Authors to identify investigational products or off-label uses of products regulated by the US

    Food and Drug Administration, at first mention and where appropriate in the content.

    ModeratorScott D. Solomon, MD

    Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Director, Noninvasive Cardiology; Director, Cardiac Imaging Core Laboratory

    and Clinical Trials Endpoints Center, Brigham and Womens Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

    Disclosure: Scott D. Solomon, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

    Served as an advisor or consultant for: Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation; Sanofi; Zoll Medical Corporation; Amgen Inc.;

    Abbott Laboratories; Theracos, Inc.; GlaxoSmithKline; Sandoz

    Received grants for clinical research from: Sanofi; Amgen Inc.; Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation; Abbott Laboratories;

    Boston Scientific

    Dr Solomon does not intend to discuss off-labeluses of drugs, mechanical devices, biologics, or diagnostics approvedby

    the FDA for use in the United States.

    Dr Solomon does not intend to discuss investigational drugs, mechanical devices, biologics, or diagnostics not approvedby

    the FDA for use in the United States.

    Panelists

    Philip B. Adamson, MD

    Director, Heart Failure Institute at Oklahoma Heart Hospital; Director, Oklahoma Foundation for Cardiovascular Research;Adjunct Associate Professor of Physiology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

    Disclosure: Philip B. Adamson, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

    Served as an advisor or consultant for: Medtronic, Inc.; St. Jude Medical; CardioMEMS; Cardiologic Innovations, CVRx, Inc.;

    Sensible Medical Innovations

    Served as a speaker or a member of a speakers bureau for: Medtronic, Inc.; St. Jude Medical; CardioMEMS; Cardiologic

    Innovations; CVRx, Inc.; Sensible Medical Innovations; Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Ltd.

    Dr Adamson does not intend to discuss off-labeluses of drugs, mechanical devices, biologics, or diagnostics approvedby

    the FDA for use in the United States.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    4/19

    Dr Adamson does not intend to discuss investigational drugs, mechanical devices, biologics, or diagnostics not approved

    by the FDA for use in the United States.

    Paul Hauptman, MD

    Professor of Internal Medicine, Division of Cardiology; Assistant Dean, Clinical and Translational Research, Saint Louis

    University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri

    Disclosure: Paul Hauptman, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

    Served as an advisor or consultant for: BioControl Medical; Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.

    Served as a speaker or a member of a speakers bureau for: Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.

    Received grants for clinical research from: Celladon

    Dr Hauptman does not intend to discuss off-labeluses of drugs, mechanical devices, biologics, or diagnostics approvedby

    the FDA for use in the United States.

    Dr Hauptman does not intend to discuss investigational drugs, mechanical devices, biologics, or diagnostics not approved

    by the FDA for use in the United States.

    Editor

    Ronald K. Miller, PhD

    Scientific Director, Medscape, LLC

    Disclosure: Ronald K. Miller, PhD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

    Acute MI Steering Committee

    Deepak L. Bhatt, MD, MPH

    Chief of Cardiology, VA Boston Healthcare System; Senior Physician, Brigham and Women's Hospital; Professor of

    Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Senior Investigator, TIMI Study Group, Boston, Massachusetts

    Disclosure: Deepak L. Bhatt, MD, MPH, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

    Received grants for clinical research from: AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company; Eisai Inc.;

    Ethicon, Inc.; Medtronic, Inc.; sanofi-aventis; The Medicines Company; Medtronic, Inc.

    Roberta C. Bogaev, MD

    Assistant Professor of Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; Private Practice Cardiologist, Schnitzler

    Cardiovascular Consultants, San Antonio, Texas

    Disclosure: Roberta C. Bogaev, MD Roberta C. Bogaev, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

    Ted E. Feldman, MD

    Professor of Medicine, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Evanston, Illinois

    Disclosure: Ted E. Feldman, MD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    5/19

    Served as an advisor or consultant for: Abbott Laboratories; Boston Scientific; Coherex Medical, Inc.; Edwards Lifesciences;

    Intervalve; Daiichi Sankyo, Inc.; Eli Lilly and Company; W.L. Gore & Associates, Inc.

    Served as a speaker or a member of a speakers bureau for: Boston Scientific Received grants for clinical research from:

    Abbott Laboratories; Boston Scientific; Edwards Lifesciences; St. Jude Medical; W.L. Gore & Associates, Inc.

    Jagmeet P. Singh, MD, PhD

    Associate Professor of Medicine, Cardiac Arrhythmia Service, Massachusetts General Hospital Heart Center, Harvard Medical

    School, Boston, Massachusetts

    Disclosure: Jagmeet P. Singh, MD, PhD, has disclosed the following relevant financial relationships:

    Served as an advisor or consultant for: BIOTRONIK; Boston Scientific; Medtronic, Inc.; St. Jude Medical; Sorin Group;

    CardioInsight Technologies Inc.; Thoratec Corporation

    Served as a speaker or a member of a speakers bureau for: BIOTRONIK; Boston Scientific; St. Jude Medical; Sorin Group

    Received grants for clinical research from: BIOTRONIK; Boston Scientific; St. Jude Medical; Sorin Group; Medtronic, Inc.

    CME Reviewer

    Nafeez Zawahir, MD

    CME Clinical Director, Medscape, LLC

    Disclosure: Nafeez Zawahir, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

    Nurse Planner

    Laurie E. Scudder, DNP, NP

    Nurse Planner, Continuing Professional Education Department, Medscape, LLC; Clinical Assistant Professor, School of

    Nursing and Allied Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC

    Disclosure: Laurie E. Scudder, DNP, NP, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

    From Medscape Education Cardiology

    Scott D. Solomon, MD; Philip B. Adamson, MD; Paul Hauptman, MD

    Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in HeartFailure CME/CE

    CME/CE Released: 04/30/2013 ; Reviewed and Renewed: 06/16/2014 ; Valid for credit through 06/16/2015

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    6/19

    Slide 1.

    Philip B. Adamson, MD: Hello, my name is Phil Adamson. I am from the Heart Failure Institute at the Oklahoma Heart

    Hospital in Oklahoma City.

    Paul Hauptman, MD:I am Paul Hauptman from St. Louis University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri.

    Scott D. Solomon, MD:And I am Scott Solomon from Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Womens Hospital in

    Boston, Massachusetts. We are here today to discuss the very real risk for sudden cardiac death (SCD) in patients who have

    heart failure (HF). Nearly 5 million patients in the United States have HF, and nearly 500,000 are diagnosed with HF for the first

    time each year. These patients are particularly vulnerable to sudden cardiac arrest. Survival rates are very poor in these

    patients.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    7/19

    Slide 2.

    Our objectives today are to identify persistent treatment gaps within the HF population; to evaluate the potential mechanisms

    underlying the risk for SCD and HF; and to assess the role of implantable cardioverter-def ibrillators (ICDs) and wearable

    cardioverter-defibrillators (WCDs) to address the risk of SCD in patients with ischemic and nonischemic HF. Why dont we

    begin. Phil, Paul, thanks for joining. Lets talk about the risk for sudden death in the patient with HF. Paul, who is at greatest

    risk, and why?

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    8/19

    Slide 3.

    Dr Hauptman: That is really the million dollar question. We know who is at risk in a global sense. We know that ejection

    fraction (EF), for example, will predict SCD risk. We know a family history of SCD is a strong predictor. Aside from that, it gets

    more diff icult, which is the clinical challenge. We do not have a good way to divide patients who are, let us say, at very high

    risk, from high risk, to moderate risk, to lower risk. If you are on the higher end of the low EF group, you are probably at lower

    risk. That is about the extent of our ability to navigate the prognostic waters.

    Dr Solomon:The risk of SCD is certainly higher if your EF is very low. What about HF with preserved EF? Are those people

    also at increased risk?

    Dr Hauptman:That is less clear. My feeling is that those patients at risk are largely mediated through hypokalemia and

    metabolic abnormalities. I do not think that risk is anywhere near what it is for the low EF group. I should also add that the

    degree to which patients are symptomatic with HF is very important. The more symptomatic the patient is, the less likely they

    will have a sudden death event.

    Dr Adamson:That is a problem with how we come up with risk stratification. We study populations and assess a relative risk

    but then when we apply that to an individual, it is very difficult to hone in on that individuals risk, to gain insight into the decision-

    making process for an ICD, focusing on those at highest risk, the post-myocardial infarction (MI) patient with left ventricular

    systolic dysfunction. Identifying those subsets of the HF population may help us guide patients with advice, and help us with

    our judgment as well.

    Dr Solomon:I agree that when we try to figure out what factors influence the risk for sudden death in a post-MI population, we

    cannot at present do a very good job.

    Slide 4.

    Looking at the VALIANT trial, where there were approximately 14,600 patients, nearly 1100 had an event, and more than 900

    people died suddenly.[1]

    We tried very hard to identify which factors predicted sudden death. Unfortunately, all the factors that

    predict sudden death in that population are also the factors that predict death of any sort. We did not have very sophisticated

    electrocardiographic measures but even if we did, I am not sure that we could have discovered the factors. Certainly there are

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    9/19

    no biomarkers that predict SCD.

    Slide 5.

    Dr Adamson:For transparency, we need to indicate that when we say sudden death we mean preventable sudden death.

    That would mean the population of patients in whom lethal arrhythmias cause an abrupt problem that can be treated. Other

    things cause sudden death: cerebrovascular accidents, pulmonary embolism, myocardial rupture, and aneurysms. We have to

    clarify which group of patients who die suddenly can be helped. We need to identify the arrhythmic group, because we have

    ways to treat them.

    Dr Hauptman:We should also clarify that we are talking about a primary prevention strategy. We know that if you have had a

    primary event, you are at high risk. Sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT), symptomatic VT with presyncope and syncope, and

    an actual SCD event puts you at the highest risk. We know that there are certain periods of time, like early post-MI, when you

    are at higher risk than later, following your MI when the patient is at risk.

    We know that a wider QRS probably portends a poor overall prognosis, including SCD. Those patients are most concerning.

    New-onset cardiomyopathy is a very mixed heterogeneous population. They can include some patients at high risk, but they

    can also include some patients at low risk. Depending on presentation, up to 50% of those patients will improve their EF with

    aggressive medical therapy.

    Dr Solomon:The issue of timing is incredibly important. We looked at the timing of sudden death relative to an MI in theVALIANT trial.

    [1]We found that the risk of SCD was dramatically highest in the first 30 days, then declined fairly rapidly. Even if

    your EF was > 40% in the first 30 days, your risk of dying was > 1% per month. These were people who were discharged from

    the hospital, not expected to die, not expected to have SCD, went home, and then were found dead. The other point that you

    made, Phil, is that we want to consider those SCDs we can prevent. In the post-MI patient population they are not all due to

    arrhythmia.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    10/19

    Slide 6.

    We looked at this again in the VALIANT trial where we had autopsies on a subset of patients. We saw that in about 50% of

    patients who died suddenly, we could not identify either a new MI, a rupture, or any other clear reason for death. We assume

    that those are the arrhythmic deaths. Whether we could prevent all of those, we do not know.[2]

    In the chronic HF population,

    we see the same thing. When they are hospitalized with HF, then get discharged, their risk is extremely high early and then

    comes down gradually with time. Is this a window of opportunity?

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    11/19

    Slide 7.

    Dr Adamson: I think it is. It is difficult. Clinical trials applying therapies like ICDs, in that vulnerable period, the highest risk

    period, do not reduce mortality. That is a paradox. It is difficult to understand. Why, for example in DINAMIT was there no

    overall reduction in the risk for death with early application of an ICD?[3]

    There are many possible answers, or at least

    speculations. That vulnerable period from MI and left ventricular dysfunction until 30 to 40 days is a very high-risk period, but is

    not best treated by an implantable device. This presents the opportunity to use alternative therapies that we have not had

    before.

    Dr Solomon:There was another trial besides DINAMIT. It was called IRIS and it showed essentially the same thing.[4]Early

    post-MI ICD did not benefit these patients.

    Dr Hauptman:If you want to extend it, although it is an old trial and we do not practice this way, the CABG Patch Trial

    suggested that there is no benefit from early ICD placement post-revascularization.[5]

    Obviously this was in the

    pre-transvenous defibrillator age.

    Slide 8.

    Dr Adamson:That leads to the concept that there are retrievable arrhythmias, or treatable arrhythmias. Then there are other

    causes of SCD that may not be best thought of as an arrhythmic process. That leads us to make recommendations for all

    post-MI medical therapies such as -blockers and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, to affect the remodeling

    process that could lead to another MI or vascular remodeling that leads to SCD. When we get into the technocratic stage of

    devices that do wonderful things, we forget that the medicines we have used after MI are very effective at lowering mortality.

    We should focus on using those medicines and encouraging people to focus on them as well. True application of an

    antiarrhythmic intervention is where the conundrum comes. How do we choose which patient should get an ICD? How do we

    choose which patient should go home with a WCD? Now that we have WCDs, where does that fit in with the processing of our

    clinical judgment?

    Dr Solomon:We have come a long way with medications. In the VALIANT trial, the majority of patients were on -blockers,

    statins, aspirin, and, by definition, getting an inhibitor of the renin-angiotensin system; yet we had an 11% sudden death rate.[1]

    Granted, we cannot necessarily affect the outcome in all of those patients, but are there strategies we should think about in

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    12/19

    these high-risk patients, and then move to the broader HF population?

    Dr Hauptman:VALIANT as a clinical trial is not indicative of a real world clinical practice. In 2010 we published a paper in

    Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomesthat described -blocker use in a generic HF population; < 40% of

    patients had a -blocker prescription covering at least 80% of the 90 days leading up to defibrillator placement.[6]

    - blocker

    compliance/adherence was high in VALIANT because it was a clinical study; in the real world it is much lower. There is clearly

    an opportunity to maximize medical therapy post-MI and in new-onset HF. That is the lowest tech way to prevent SCD: put a

    patient on a -blocker, maybe also an aldosterone antagonist following MI. EPEHESUS showed similar findings to

    VALIANT.

    [7]

    Dr Adamson: If we have an ischemic patient in that vulnerable period where ICDs do not seem to reduce mortality, but we

    have high risk, what do you recommend in that group?

    Dr Solomon:I would first note that these studies tended to implant devices relatively late post-MI. The average time of

    implantation in DINAMIT was 17 days.[3]

    What we found in the VALIANT trial was that the risk started very early. We are

    discharging patients now -- I do not know about Oklahoma or St. Louis, but in Boston, we are discharging patients within 3 or 4

    days post-MI. That policy rarely changes, even if their EF is reduced post-MI. That puts them in an extremely vulnerable

    period. For each individual patient we need to consider whether they would benefit from some type of temporary treatment

    before we can make a determination of whether they might need an ICD long-term.

    Dr Hauptman:Do you think these electrical events post-MI, when they do occur, are all VT or ventricular fibrillation (VF)? Doyou have any idea what the incidence of bradycardic arrest, pulseless electrical activity (PEA) arrest, is? Neither the WCDs nor

    ICDs are going to save the patient. Could that explain the failure of these trials to show a benefit?

    Slide 9.

    Dr Adamson:That is hard to say. It seems that of the arrhythmic or electrical events that lead to sudden death, it is thought

    that around 85% to 90% are tachyarrhythmias. Sustained bradyarrhythmias account for maybe 10%. Then the

    electromechanical disassociation PEA-type arrhythmias, in which there is no treatment really, is a small percentage. I think 2%

    to 5% are probably unrecoverable.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    13/19

    Dr Hauptman: Scott, you mentioned the autopsy study in VALIANT. There was an autopsy study in ATLAS.In

    nonischemics in ATLAS a fair percentage - - I do not recall the exact number, died of acute MI even though they were

    nonischemics. They went on to develop plaque rupture. We have seen that as well. Not all sudden death events in the

    nonischemic population are electrical.

    Dr Adamson:We do not have time to talk about whether it is an ischemic cardiomyopathy, or cardiomyopathy in the presence

    of ischemic heart disease, and what risks that portrays. It becomes very difficult to sort out outcomes from clinical trials based

    on those definitions. What group of patients are we even studying? Then, when you put it into practice it becomes quite a

    conundrum.

    Dr Solomon:Paul, we have been talking a fair amount about the post-MI patient. Obviously the chronic HF patient is at risk as

    well. In your practice treating chronic HF patients, do you see windows of opportunity for shorter term therapies than

    implantable devices?

    Slide 10.

    Dr Hauptman:You are talking about the de novo HF presentation. These patients are challenging. By the Centers for

    Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the national coverage determination, you have to wait 9 months before you can put an

    ICD.[9]

    I have always argued that there are 2 types of patients who present de novo. There are those who have truly de novo

    cardiomyopathy and HF. Then there are those who have established cardiomyopathy but a de novo presentation of HF. How

    do you distinguish those two? That is a challenge. For the group that you think has established cardiomyopathy, to wait 9months is asking a lot. It is also asking a lot from medical therapy. I do not know about you Phil, but I would say if you were to

    see a left bundle branch block pattern, an end-diastolic dimension of 7.5 cm to 8 cm -- that did not just occur in the last 30

    days. That person has established cardiomyopathy, especially if you throw in a family history of cardiomyopathy. Those

    patients are especially concerning. In general, those patients are not going to be among the 50% that improves their EF. A

    few of them might but most will not.

    Dr Adamson:The 9-month wait period is a real risk. When you look at the DEFINITE trial,[10]

    looking back at the people who

    had de novo -- as c lose as they could call de novo HF -- in that trial, there was still a benefit of an ICD within the first 3 months

    of implantation. There are data, albeit retrospective, that an ICD reduces SCD in nonischemic patients requiring a shorter

    waiting period from the time of their diagnosis or closer to their diagnosis. It is a conundrum. Our risks are critical, possibly a

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    14/19

    SCD that could have been prevented. Yet, the alternative is 9 months of wearing a WCD. That sometimes is difficult to

    recommend to a patient.

    Fortunately, patients with prolonged QRS durations have to wait a shorter period of time for resynchronization therapy. We

    have a general consensus that there should be a 3-month waiting period for a cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) device.

    These are not inconsequential questions because of the potential financial liability if we put ICDs in wrong, at the wrong time,

    and have to pay back the money plus penalties. These are issues we all have to face in this country. Timing is not just a

    consensus question, is a regulatory question, as well as a financial reimbursement question.

    Slide 11.

    Dr Hauptman:Phil, that is really a great point. As a clinician you have a challenge. You have American College of Cardiology

    (ACC)/ American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines.[11]

    You have the recently published ACC appropriateness paper across

    369 different indications.[10]

    You have the national coverage determination,[9]

    you have clinical judgment, you have patient

    preference, and then you must synthesize these and not expose yourself to risk. Yet ultimately the issue is about the patient.

    Making sure that the patient is not put at risk is the real clinical challenge.

    Dr Adamson: It is a challenge.

    Dr Solomon:Many of these guidelines are based on EF, which we know is variable. It can change in the course of a patients

    illness. It is also a measurement, and I am an echocardiographer, but it is a measurement that has an error around it ofprobably 7 points either way. Can we be completely sure that we know what category a patient fits into when we try to assess

    the risk?

    Dr Hauptman:I love this point because, unfortunately, we paint by numbers now. We act as if something magical happens.

    At 36%, you are not at risk. At 34%, put in a defibrillator. That presents two completely different approaches to the patient. Is

    36 really 36? Is the 34 really 34? Is the 36 going to stay 36? Is the 34 going to stay 34? We act as if there are these cutoffs

    that are meaningful for the patient. The patient does not know what the EF is. The patient just does not want to have a SCD.

    That is a true surrogate. Scott, I am sure you have never had a patient who shows up in the of fice and says, Hey doc, my EF

    is 29%. I think I need a defibrillator.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    15/19

    Dr Solomon:The problem is that we focus on that number. We ignore other things that we know about the patient. I can tell

    you that from large clinical trials we can see that a patient with diabetes and an EF of 40% is at risk for sudden death just as

    much as a patient without diabetes and an EF of 25%. Renal function is another incredibly important modifier of risk that we

    are not paying attention to. What about the data for the use of WCDs? There have not been the type of trials we saw with the

    ICDs. We assume that if you are wearing one and you have an arrhythmia that they are effective. That depends on many

    things, including the patients adherence. Do patients like to wear these, or should I say are they comfortable wearing them

    enough so that they leave them on when they are at rest?

    Dr Adamson:That is a big deal, both of those questions. Number one, do we know that it is effective? As Paul mentioned, itis not effective against bradyarrhythmias.

    It is not effective if it is sitting on the bedside while the patient is sleeping. Your data, and others, have demonstrated that many

    SCDs, if not the majority of true out-of-the-hospital/at-home sudden deaths, occur while patients are sleeping. If they do not

    feel comfortable enough to wear it to bed while sleeping, which is one of the most vulnerable times, they could die suddenly.

    The post-MI period to me seems to be a no-brainer. Patients really buy into the WCD because they know in 30 days, or 40

    days, or whatever their waiting period might be, they see the light at the end of the tunnel. It is the nonischemic patients who

    are at risk where you are compelled to wait 9 months.

    Dr Solomon:You mention sleeping. It is apropos that you alluded to many of the patients who had SCD during sleep.

    Obviously people ask all the time if they should buy an automated external defibrillator (AED). Well, you need 2 things then:

    that the patient is having an arrhythmia, and that there is a spouse who wants to resuscitate them.

    Dr Adamson:And who is awake?

    Dr Solomon:Right.

    Slide 12.

    Dr Hauptman: We know that that approach does not work from the HAT study.[12]

    In fact, it was a failure. The number of events was relatively small. The number of events for which the external defibrillator was

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    16/19

    actually applied was small. You need an educated caregiver, who is at home at the time, who can recognize when it happens.

    It should not be upstairs and the patient downstairs. That is often lacking. The early implant will not work. The home defibrillator

    will not work. In the WCD registry, the compliance was remarkably high. It was nearly 22 hours a day in something like 900

    patients.[13]

    Slide 13.

    I was actually surprised when I saw those data. We are concerned if patients say, Well, I will not wear it today. Obviously we

    tell them when they take a shower they can take it off . I think 22 hours is really a positive finding. The duration of use, ingeneral, is not 9 months. It is somewhere between 1 to 2 months when you consider the post-MI population.

    [14]Clinically there

    is hardly anything more rewarding than to be able to say to a patient, You know what, you can take the WCD of f occasionally,

    and, we do not have to put in a transvenous device.

    Dr Adamson:Or the one who had a shock.

    Dr Hauptman:Good point.

    Dr Adamson:Now you have a secondary prevention strategy for an implantable device. That is also very gratifying. Those

    anecdotes, I think, drive the utilization of the WCD.

    Dr Solomon:Is it fair to say, in summing up, that for these very high risk patients there are options other than implanting anexpensive device, and perhaps we need to grow awareness of these alternative options, emphasizing the risk to these

    patients.

    Dr Adamson:Pressure comes from matching quality markers and mortality post MI, and the high risk in that 30-day period for

    sudden death, using the WCD is a grand opportunity for institutions to recognize the opportunity to reduce mortality post-MI. I

    think that is a great starting point, and how we apply the WCD to the longer term chronic HF patients in a primary prevention

    strategy will evolve over time. It is a great opportunity for us to improve quality and reduce mortality after MI.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    17/19

    Slide 14.

    Dr Solomon:Paul and Phil, this has been a great discussion. Thank you for participating in this activity. To proceed to the

    CME posttest click the earned CME credit link on this page.

    This transcript has been edited for style and clarity.

    This article is a CME/CE certified activity. To earn credit for this activity visit:

    http://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/803124

    Abbreviations

    ACC = American College of Cardiology

    ACE = angiotensin-converting enzyme

    AED = automated external defibrillator

    AHA = American Heart Association

    ATLAS = assessment of treatment with lisinopril and survival

    CABG = coronary artery bypass graft

    CMS = Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

    CRT = cardiac resynchronization therapy

    DEFINITE = Defibrillators in Non-Ischemic Cardiomyopathy Treatment Evaluation

    DINAMIT = Defibrillator in Acute Myocardial Infarction Trial

    EF = ejection fraction

    EPHESUS = Eplerenone Post-AMI Heart Failure Eff icacy and Survival Study

    HAT = Home Automated External Defibrillator Trial

    HF = heart failure

    ICD = implantable cardioverter-def ibrillator

    IRIS = Immediate Risk Stratification Improves Survival

    MI = myocardial infarction

    PEA = pulseless electrical activity

    SCD = sudden cardiac death

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    18/19

    VALIANT = VALsartan In Acute myocardial infarction

    VF = ventricular fibrillation

    VT = ventricular tachycardia

    WCD = wearable cardioverter-defibrillator

    References

    Solomon SD, Zelenkofske S, McMurray JJ, et al; Valsartan in Acute Myocardial Infarction Trial (VALIANT)

    Investigators. Sudden death in patients with myocardial infarction and left ventricular dysfunction, heart failure, or both.N

    Engl J Med.2005;352:2581-2588.

    1.

    Pouleur AC, Barkoudah E, Uno H, et al. Pathogenesis of sudden unexpected death in a clinical trial of patients with

    myocardial infarction and left ventricular dysfunction, heart failure, or both.Circulation.2010; 122:597-602.

    2.

    Dorian P, Hohnloser SH, Thorpe KE, et al. Mechanisms underlying the lack of effect of implantable cardioverter-

    def ibrillator therapy on mortality in high-risk patients with recent myocardial infarction: insights from the Def ibrillation in

    Acute Myocardial Infarction Trial (DINAMIT).Circulation. 2010;122:2645-2652.

    3.

    Steinbeck G, Andresen D, Seidl K, et al; IRIS Investigators. Defibrillator implantation early after myocardial infarction. N

    Engl J Med. 2009; 361:1427-1436.

    4.

    Bigger JT Jr. Prophylactic use of implanted cardiac defibrillators in patients at high risk for ventricular arrhythmias after

    coronary-artery bypass graft surgery. Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Patch Trial Investigators. N Engl J Med.

    1997;337:1569-1575.

    5.

    Hauptman PJ, Swindle JP, Masoudi FA, et al. Underutilization of beta-blockers in patients undergoing implantable

    cardioverter-defibrillator and cardiac resynchronization procedures.Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes. 2010;

    2:204-211.

    6.

    Pitt B, Williams G, Remme W, et al. The EPHESUS trial: eplerenone in patients with heart failure due to systolic

    dysfunction complicating acute myocardial infarction. Eplerenone Post-AMI Heart Failure Efficacy and Survival Study.

    Cardiovasc Drugs Ther2001;15:79-87.

    7.

    Poole-Wilson PA, Uretsky BF, Thygesen K, Cleland JG, Massie BM, Rydn L; Atlas Study Group. Assessment of

    treatment with lisinopril and survival. Mode of death in heart failure: f indings from the ATLAS trial. Heart. 2003;89:

    42-48.

    8.

    Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Department of Health and Human Services. CMS Manual System, Pub.

    100-03 Medicare National Coverage Determinations. Available at: http://www.cms.gov/transmittals/downloads

    /R29NCD.pdf. Published March 4, 2005. Accessed April 11, 2013.

    9.

    Russo AM, Stainback RF, Bailey SR, et al.ACCF/HRS/AHA/ASE/HFSA/SCAI/SCCT/SCMR 2013 Appropriate Use

    Criteria for Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillators and Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy: A Report of the American

    College of Cardiology Foundation Appropriate Use Criteria Task Force, Heart Rhythm Society, American Heart

    Association, American Society of Echocardiography, Heart Failure Society of America, Society for Cardiovascular

    Angiography and Interventions, Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, and Society for Cardiovascular

    Magnetic Resonance. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013;61:1318-1368.

    10.

    Zipes DP, Camm AJ, Borggrefe M, et al. ACC/AHA/ESC 2006 guidelines for management of patients with ventricular

    arrhythmias and the prevention of sudden cardiac death: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American

    Heart Association Task Force and the European Society of Cardiology Committee for Practice Guidelines (WritingCommittee to Develop guidelines for management of patients with ventricular arrhythmias and the prevention of

    sudden cardiac death) developed in collaboration with the European Heart Rhythm Association and the Heart Rhythm

    Society. Circulation. 2006;114:e385-e484.

    11.

    Bardy GH, Lee KL, Mark DB, et al; HAT Investigators. Home use of automated external defibrillators for sudden

    cardiac arrest.N Engl J Med. 2008;358:1793-1804.

    12.

    Kadish A, Dyer A, Daubert JP, et al. Prophylactic def ibrillator implantation in patients with nonischemic dilated

    cardiomyopathy.Defibrillators in Non-Ischemic Cardiomyopathy Treatment Evaluation (DEFINITE) Investigators. N

    Engl J Med.2004;350:2151-2158.

    13.

    Chung MK, Szymkiewicz SJ, Shao M, et al. Aggregate national experience with the wearable cardioverter-def ibrillator:

    event rates, compliance, and survival. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2010;56:194-203.

    14.

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031

    19 7/29/2014

  • 7/26/2019 Addressing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (Printer-friendly)

    19/19

    Disclaimer

    The educational activity presented above may involve simulated case-based scenarios. The patients depicted in these

    scenarios are f ictitious and no association with any actual patient is intended or should be inferred.

    The material presented here does not necessarily reflect the views of Medscape, LLC, or companies that support educational

    programming on medscape.org. These materials may discuss therapeutic products that have not been approved by the US

    Food and Drug Administration and off-label uses of approved products. A qualified healthcare professional should be

    consulted before using any therapeutic product discussed. Readers should verify all information and data before treating

    patients or employing any therapies described in this educational activity.

    Medscape Education 2013 Medscape, LLC

    This article is a CME/CE certified activity. To earn credit for this activity visit:

    http://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/803124

    essing the Risk for Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure (printer... http:/ /www.medscape.org/viewarticle/8031