articleNew England Journal of MedicineNov 6, 2012BRONZE OA

Reduction in Inappropriate Therapy and Mortality through ICD Programming

University of Rochester Medical Center · Henry Ford Hospital · +8 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

The implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is highly effective in reducing mortality among patients at risk for fatal arrhythmias, but inappropriate ICD activations are frequent, with potential adverse effects.

Methods

We randomly assigned 1500 patients with a primary-prevention indication to receive an ICD with one of three programming configurations. The primary objective was to determine whether programmed high-rate therapy (with a 2.5-second delay before the initiation of therapy at a heart rate of ≥200 beats per minute) or delayed therapy (with a 60-second delay at 170 to 199 beats per minute, a 12-second delay at 200 to 249 beats per minute, and a 2.5-second delay at ≥250 beats per minute) was associated with a decrease in the number of patients with a first occurrence of inappropriate antitachycardia pacing or shocks, as compared with conventional programming (with a 2.5-second delay at 170 to 199 beats per minute and a 1.0-second delay at ≥200 beats per minute).

Citation impact

1,358
total citations
FWCI
72.78
Percentile
100%
References
25
Citations per year

Authors

17

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Reduction (mathematics)
  • Intensive care medicine
  • Medicine
  • Mathematics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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