Transvenous lead extraction: The influence of age on patient outcomes in the PROMET study cohort.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_F389E487C13F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Transvenous lead extraction: The influence of age on patient outcomes in the PROMET study cohort.
Journal
Pacing and clinical electrophysiology
Author(s)
Akhtar Z., Elbatran A.I., Starck C.T., Gonzalez E., Al-Razzo O., Mazzone P., Delnoy P.P., Breitenstein A., Steffel J., Eulert-Grehn J., Lanmüller P., Melillo F., Marzi A., Leung LWM, Domenichini G., Sohal M., Gallagher M.M.
ISSN
1540-8159 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0147-8389
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
44
Number
9
Pages
1540-1548
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Multicenter Study
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED) therapy contributes to an improvement in morbidity and mortality across all patient demographics. Patient age is a recognized risk factor for unfavorable outcomes in invasive procedures. This is the largest series of non-laser transvenous lead extraction (TLE) evaluating the association between patient age and procedure outcomes.
Data of 2205 (3849 leads) patients was collected retrospectively from six European TLE centers between January 2005-December 2018 in the PROMET study. Of these, 153 patients with 319 leads were excluded for incomplete data. A comparison of outcomes was performed between the age groups young [< 50 years], young intermediate [50-69 years], older intermediate [70-79 years], and octogenarian [≥80 years].
Infection was most common indication for TLE in the octogenarian cohort, less common in the younger population (60.1% vs. 33.2%, respectively, p < .01). High-voltage leads were extracted most frequently from young patients, less frequently from octogenarians (31.6% vs. 10%, p < .001), while the opposite was evident for pacemaker leads (p < .001). Rotational sheath use was equally prevalent across all patient groups (p = .79). Minor and major complications across all the age groups were statistically similar, as was procedural success; the 30-day mortality was most significant in the octogenarian and least in the young patients (4.9% vs. 0.4%, p = .005). Propensity matching multivariate analysis found systemic infection, lead dwell time, and patient age (p = .013, OR 1.064 [1.013-1.116]) increased risk of 30-day mortality.
TLE is safe and effective across all age groups. 30-day mortality risk is significantly higher in the older patients.
Keywords
Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Device Removal/methods, Electrodes, Implanted, Europe, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, CIED, TLE, age, transvenous lead extraction
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
03/03/2024 17:31
Last modification date
11/03/2024 7:17
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