PVCs Revisited: Etiology, Significance and Management Edward P - - PDF document

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PVCs Revisited: Etiology, Significance and Management Edward P - - PDF document

12/7/19 PVCs Revisited: Etiology, Significance and Management Edward P Gerstenfeld MD Twitter: @ed_gerst Professor of Medicine University of California, San Francisco 2.0 1 Conflicts Biosense-webster: research grant, honoraria


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PVCs Revisited: Etiology, Significance and Management

Edward P Gerstenfeld MD Twitter: @ed_gerst Professor of Medicine University of California, San Francisco

2.0

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Conflicts

Ø Biosense-webster: research grant, honoraria Ø Medtronic: research grant, donated devices, leads Ø St Jude medical: research grant, honoraria Ø Boston Scientific: research grant, honoraria Ø Rhythm Diagnostic Systems: Board of Directors

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ØECG Localization ØPrognosis ØWhen to Worry ØMechanism of PVC Cardiomyopathy ØManagement ØConclusions

Outline

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27 yo with palpitations

Ø LBB/inferior axis V4 transition

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ECG Localization

Enriquez et al. Heart Rhythm 2019, in press

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Aorta RVOT

RV or LV Outflow Tract?

RVOT

posterior anterior

LVOT (LCC)

R L A P

V2 V1

Superior view

V3 V6 V5 V4

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The V2 Transition Ratio: A New ECG Criterion for Distinguishing LV From RV Outflow Tachycardia Origin

I II III R L F I II III R L F V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6

RVOT LVOT

Betensky … Gerstenfeld. JACC 2011;57:2255-62

Patient 1 Patient 2

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PVC ECG Localization

Enriquez Heart Rhythm 2019, in press

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Prognosis

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Association Between Baseline PVCs and 5-Year Reduction in EF

Dukes J … Marcus G. J Am Coll Cardiol 2015;66:101–9.

Ø 1,139 CHS participants with normal EF and no prior CHF randomly assigned to 24-hour Holter Ø Echocardiogram at baseline and 5 years

Adjusted for age, sex, race, BMI, HTN, DM, CAD, BB use, AF, NSVT

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Population Risk for Incident CHF

Dukes J … Marcus G. J Am Coll Cardiol 2015;66:101–9.

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Lee AKY, et al. Heart 2019;0:1–6.

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Frequent PVC Evolution

Ø 44 pts (44%) had PVC resolution (<1%) over 15.4m [2.6-64.3] Ø 52 pts (52%) had a ≥80% reduction in PVCs over 14.1m Ø 4 pts (4.0%) reduced LVEF <50% over 60.9m [52.7-74.8]

Lee AKY, et al. Heart 2019;0:1–6.

Ø 9 of the 44 patients (20.5%) had a subsequent increase in PVC burden to ≥1%

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PVCs in Underlying Structural Heart Disease – GISSI-2 Trial

Maggioni AP. Circulation. 1993;87:312-322.

Patients with LV Dysfunction

No PVCs 1-10 PVCs/h > 10 PVCs/h

0.88 0.90 0.92 0.94 0.96 0.98 1.00 30 60 90 120 150 180

Days

Survival p log-rank 0.0001

0.86

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Idiopathic PVC’s/VT When to worry

Ø History of syncope Ø Frequent ectopy (>20,000 PVCs over 24hours) Ø Fast sustained RVOT VT (>230 bpm) Ø Short coupled PVCs or Torsade Ø Abnormal right or left ventricular function Ø Multiple VT/PVC morphologies or unusual morphology

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PVC Burden and Cardiomyopthy

Baman TS et al. Heart Rhythm 2010;7:865-869.

N=174 pts with frequent PVCs 57/174 (33%) with decreased EF Pre-RF Post-RF

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When to Worry:

Tachy-Induced Cardiomyopathy

Ø 24 patients with tachy induced cardiomyopathy Ø Etiology: AF, AFL, AT, PJRT, PVCs Ø 5 patients with recurrent tachycardia Ø 3/24 (12.5%) with sudden death

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When to Worry: Short Coupled PVCs

Viskin S et al. JCE 2005;16:912-916.

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PVCs: When to Worry

52 yo man with palpitations and presyncope

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Lightheadedness During Exertion

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32 yo with PVCs

Ø Arrhythmogenic RV Cardiomyopathy

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Mechanism: Idiopathic PVCs

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A port V port

pacing sensing

Swine PVC Model

PM

AV delay=coupling interval

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0.0 10.0 20.0 30.0 40.0 50.0 60.0 70.0 80.0 90.0 W 2 W 4 W 6 W 8 W 1 W 1 2 W 1 4 W PVC Control 0.0 5.0 10.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0 35.0 40.0 W 2 W 4 W 6 W 8 W 1 W 1 2 W 1 4 W PVC (LVDD) Control (LVDD) PVC (LVSD)

LV ejection fraction LV end-diastolic dimension LV end-systolic dimension

Effect of 50% PVCs on LV Function

n=5 n=10

Tanaka et al. Heart Rhythm. 2016 Feb;13(2):547-54

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5 10 15

1 2 3 4

Control mild CMPY CMPY

2 4 6 8 10

1

BL AL Control mild CMPY CMPY AS BS

% fibrosis % fibrosis

A

Control (basal-lateral): 1.8% fibrosis Cardiomyopathy (basal-lateral): 4.7% fibrosis

Fibrosis in LV CMPY

*

Tanaka et al. Heart Rhythm. 2016 Feb;13(2):547-54

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Recovery of LVEF After PVC Cessation

PVCs Off

Control LV PVC Recovery

LVEF (%)

40 50 60 70 80

Weeks

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

F-statistic 31.5, p<0.001

n=5 n=5 n=5

Walters T et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2018;72:2870-2882.

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LV Fibrosis Persist after PVC Cessation

Walters T et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2018;72:2870-2882.

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Management

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PVC Evaluation

Ø 12-lead ECG + rhythm strip morphology Ø 7 or 14-day continuous monitor Ø Echocardiogram Ø Cardiac MRI if – non-OT morphology, multiple morphologies, abnormal echo

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Daily Variation in PVC Burden With 14-day Monitor

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Treatment Options for Idiopathic PVCs

Ø Reassurance (if asx, normal EF, low PVC burden) Ø Beta-blockers (consider acebutolol, bisoprolol) Ø Class IB antiarrhythmics (mexiletine) Ø Class IC antiarrhythmics (flecainide, propafenone) if no SHD Ø Class III antiarrhythmics (sotalol, amiodarone) if EF significantly reduced Ø Catheter ablation

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Before ablation I II III

200 100 1 sec 50

After ablation I II III

200 100 50

Hemodynamics of Ventricular Ectopy

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PVC Burden LV EF N=20

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Catheter Ablation of PVCs

Success rates 90-95% for OT PVCs

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Treatment of PVCs in LV Dysfunction

Ø Guideline-directed medical therapy:

  • B-blockers, ace inhibitor, aldactone

Ø If PVC burden > 10,000 -> Rx suppression or catheter ablation Ø IF EF<35% despite PVC suppression -> ICD Ø IF LBBB and persistent EF<35% -> BiV ICD

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Penela et al. Heart Rhythm 2015;12:2434–2442

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Ø 13% BiV nonresponders (n=65) with PVC burden > 10%

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How Much PVC Reduction is Enough?

Follow-up Data No or rare VPDs (N=44) > 80% VPD reduction (N=15) No VPD Reduction (N=8) p Follow up (months) 7.5 ± 7.0 7.5 ± 7.0 8.3 ± 7.4 0.290 VPD/24hrs 320±540 2,826±782 23,768±10,183 <0.001 %VPD 0.4 ± 0.6% 2.5 ± 0.7% 22.8 ± 9.7% <0.001 EF(%) post RF 49 ± 10 45 ± 9 31 ± 11 0.002 Change in EF (%) +13 ± 9 +12 ± 9

  • 2 ± 7

0.003 LVEDD (mm) 53 ± 8 56 ± 6 62 ± 9 0.040

Mountantonakis et al. Heart Rhythm 2011;8:1608-14.

Ø Reduction of PVC burden 80% or <5% PVCs is sufficient

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PVCs in Asymptomatic Patients

Asymptomatic patients with frequent (>20k) PVCs?

1) Monitor yearly with echo/Holter for LV dilatation, drop in EF 2) Beta-blocker, if tolerated?

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Predictors of PVC Cardiomyopathy

Parameter Univariate analysis Multivariate analysis OR 95% CI p-value OR 95% CI p value NSVT 6.19 2.8–15.2 <0.001 5.26 2.09 – 13.23 <0.001 Coupling Interval >500ms 4.67 2.4–9.0 <0.001 4.73 2.19 – 10.21 <0.001 Superiorly-directed axis 2.27 1.4–4.8 0.004 2.70 1.25 – 5.81 0.01 PVC burden 10 – 20%* 2.20 1.1 – 4.6 0.04 3.50 1.39 – 8.82 0.01 PVC burden > 20%* 3.47 1.2 – 10.5 0.03 4.40 1.17 – 16.49 0.03 Broad PVC QRS (>160ms) 2.03 1.0 – 4.4 0.07

  • LBBB morphology

0.60 0.3 – 1.2 0.12

  • Age

1.00 1.0–1.0 0.98

  • Male gender

1.93 1.0 – 3.7 0.05 Atrial fibrillation 1.93 0.9 – 4.1 0.08

  • Body mass index

1.02 1.0 – 1.1 0.56

  • Hypertension

1.13 0.6 – 2.1 0.69

  • Coronary artery disease

1.48 0.8 – 2.8 0.24

  • >1 PVC morphology

1.72 0.9 – 3.3 0.10

  • Ventricular bigeminy

0.72 0.4 – 1.4 0.30

  • PVC coupling interval SD

15.2 0.9 – 258.3 0.06

  • Voskoboinik et al, submitted.

N=204

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PVC Risk Score – ABC-VT

Voskoboinik et al, submitted.

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Freedom From Adverse Events

Cardiovascular mortality, absolute LVEF decline by 10%

  • r CHF hospitalization) over 3.3±1.8 years

Voskoboinik et al, submitted.

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Are all PVCs the Same?

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PVC’s

Ø Most outflow tract PVCs in the setting of a structurally normal heart are benign! Ø History: syncope/SHD Ø Check ECG, echo and 7-14 day TTM Ø Tw inversions>V2, ”R on “T PVC, multiple/unusual PVCs, Torsade – consider referral Ø If PVC burden <5% and EF normal - reassurance Ø If PVC burden>10% & EF normal: recheck 1 year Ø If PVC burden>10% & EF reduced: medical therapy and consider referral Ø Bothersome symptoms: referral for RFA

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Thank you

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Validation Cohort

Ø Freedom from adverse events (CV mortality,LVEF decline >10% or CHF hospitalization) over 4.0±3.4 years Ø Follow-up data from Korean validation cohort with baseline LVEF > 45% and PVC burden >5%):

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