Randomized prospective trial of atrioventricular delay programming for cardiac resynchronization therapy

2004 
Objectives The purpose of this study was to determine if AV delay optimization with continuous-wave Doppler aortic velocity-time integral (VTI) is clinically superior to an empiric program in patients treated with cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) for severe heart failure. Background The impact of AV delay programming on clinical outcomes associated with CRT is unknown. Methods A randomized, prospective, single-blind clinical trial was performed to compare two methods of AV delay programming in 40 patients with severe heart failure referred for CRT. Patients were randomized to either an optimized AV delay determined by Doppler echocardiography (group 1, n=20) or an empiric AV delay of 120 ms (group 2, n=20) with both groups programmed in the atriosynchronous biventricular pacing (VDD) mode. Optimal AV delay was defined as the AV delay that yielded the largest aortic VTI at one of eight tested AV intervals (between 60 and 200 ms). New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional classification and quality-of-life (QOL) score were compared 3 months after randomization. Results Immediately after CRT initiation with AV delay programming, VTI improved by 4.0 ± 1.7 cm vs 1.8 ± 3.6 cm ( P P P P Conclusions Echocardiography-guided AV delay optimization using the aortic Doppler VTI improves clinical outcomes at 3 months compared to an empiric AV delay program of 120 ms.
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