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Yale-New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Connecticut, USA HealthLINK: Women's Health

July 13, 2005

News this month
ICDs benefit many patients with heart failure

One of the consequences of improving cardiovascular care over the last few decades is an escalating increase in the incidence of congestive heart failure (CHF). Patients who would have died of heart attacks and other cardiac events 30 years ago are now benefiting from more effective treatment and live with heart disease for many years. Gradually, however, their cardiac function may deteriorate over time, and they may be diagnosed with CHF.

People living with congestive heart failure suffer sudden cardiac arrest six to nine times as often as the general population.

Some experts suggest the number of CHF patients in the country may double to 10 million in less than a decade. Currently nearly five million Americans are living with heart failure and 550,000 new cases are diagnosed each year.

CHF is a major cause of death and of those patients who die, 30 to 50 percent die from sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). In fact, people with congestive heart failure suffer SCA six to nine times as often as the general population. More than 450,000 people die from SCA each year in the U.S., more than AIDS, lung cancer and breast cancer combined.

Sudden cardiac death research
The National Institutes of Health sponsored the landmark Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial (SCD-HeFT) to determine whether the use of implantable cardiac defibrillators (devices placed under the skin of the chest to send electrical signals to correct potentially fatal arrhythmias) and/or the antiarrhythmic drug amiodarone would reduce the risk of sudden death in patients with mild to moderate heart failure and reduced heart-pumping function.

The study, which appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine, compared the rates of death from any cause of 2,521 CHF patients over a 45-month period. Patients were divided into three groups: those with implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICDs), those taking the drug amiodarone and those who were taking a placebo. All patients had:

  • Congestive heart failure (CHF), classified as mild to moderate according to the New York Heart Association classification system, Class II or III
  • An ejection fraction (the percentage of blood in the main muscle-walled heart chamber that is pumped out when the chamber contracts) of 35 percent or less

None of these patients had any prior symptomatic rapid heart rhythms (ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation), which can be associated with sudden cardiac death.

All patients were already being treated with what is considered to be optimal medical therapy for heart failure, including angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, beta blockers, etc. Patients in all three arms of the study remained on this medical therapy during the course of the trial. Seventy percent of study participants were in the Class II (mild) category; the remainder were Class III (moderate) patients. The mean ejection fraction was 25 percent.

Patients in the ICD group experienced 23 percent fewer deaths from all causes than either the placebo or amiodarone group.

The results
There were 244 deaths (29 percent) in the placebo group; 240 (28 percent) in the amiodarone group and 182 (22 percent) in the ICD group. The results showed that patients in the ICD group experienced 23 percent fewer deaths from all causes than either the placebo or amiodarone group. Results varied depending on the severity of CHF. Class II ICD patients, experienced 46 percent fewer deaths compared to the placebo and amiodarone groups. Class III ICD patients experienced a 7.2 percent reduction in risk of death. By contrast, amiodarone therapy provided no benefit in Class II patients, and Class III patients fared less well on amiodarone than on placebo.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Lynda Rosenfeld, MD portrait.

ICDs reduce risk of sudden death

There are currently about five million patients with congestive heart failure in the U.S. This is the largest single population of patients who could potentially benefit from primary prevention of sudden cardiac arrest.

One’s ejection fraction (EF) is currently the most accurate predictor of risk for sudden cardiac death. Not everyone with congestive heart failure has a low EF, but because the number of CHF patients is increasing and because it is the leading reason people are admitted to hospitals, it makes sense to see if the mortality rate of these patients could be reduced with implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICDs).

The study demonstrated a significant benefit with ICDs, particularly for [those with mild congestive heart failure].

Ejection fraction basics
What is EF? The two lower chambers (ventricles) of your heart pump blood into your lungs (right ventricle) and to your arteries (left ventricle). When the left ventricle contracts to force blood out, it doesn't pump out all the blood inside it, however. The amount your left ventricle does pump out per beat is called the “ejection fraction.” It's the percentage of the total amount of blood in the ventricle that is pumped out with each heart beat.

If your heart pumps out 55 percent or more of the blood in your left ventricle with each beat, you have good heart function. When your EF goes down, it indicates your heart muscle is weakening and it's not pumping as much blood out with each contraction as it should. Not everyone who has a low EF has symptoms of congestive heart failure, but the lower the EF, the greater your risk of sudden cardiac death.

Study participants
The study mentioned here, SCD-HeFT, used two criteria for selecting study participants: ejection fraction and the New York Heart Association (NYHA) classification system for congestive heart failure. The NYHA system provides a common language for health care professionals to use when describing the severity of congestive heart failure symptoms. Class I patients have no symptoms related to heart failure; Class II patients have symptoms such as shortness of breath with significant exertion; Class III have symptoms with mild exertion; and the Class IV group is symptomatic at rest. SCD-HeFT patients were in the II and III categories, considered mild to moderate.

Various medications such as beta blockers, ACE inhibitors and dioxin have been shown to be effective in reducing symptoms and improving the survival and quality of life of people with congestive heart failure. All of the patients in the SCD-HeFT were already on optimal medical therapy for their condition, which strengthens the results of the study. If some patients had not been receiving “best practice” treatment, the results would be difficult to assess.

How ICDs work
The study demonstrated a significant benefit with ICDs, particularly for Class II patients. ICDs are very effective in restoring the abnormal heart rhythms that can lead to sudden cardiac death. When the ICD senses a dangerous abnormal heart rhythm, it delivers an internal electric shock to the heart, the equivalent of being shocked with paddles outside the body. There is no way to predict if and when an abnormal rhythm will occur, so ICDs are the best way we have to treat them when they occur.

The devices used in the study were basic ICDs. We also have very technically advanced ICDs that can be programmed for specific conditions. Some can actually help treat heart failure, but those used in this study were the most basic, least expensive models. Costs are a very large factor in using ICDs for primary prevention.

Results are far reaching
Given the enormous numbers of people with congestive heart failure, the implications for Medicare are significant. This study has added fuel to the movement to provide “preventive” ICD protection for these patients, and it has led to revised medical guidelines and Medicare reimbursement.

One of the most significant results of the SCD-HeFT is that the findings apply equally to people with and without coronary artery disease (CAD). Several trials have shown benefits of “preventive” ICD treatment, but this is one of the first to show benefits among both categories of congestive heart failure patients—both CAD and non-CAD patients.

One finding of this trial that differed from some other trials was the variable benefit obtained by mild and moderately ill patients. In contrast to SCD-HefT, other studies have indicated more severely ill people benefit most from ICDs, so we need to continue to study this topic.

There are a small number of patients who should not have ICDs. Some congestive heart failure patients have normal ventricular function, and there is no evidence to show that they would benefit from ICDs. Some patients have such advanced disease that ICD implantation is not going to be helpful because they will likely die in a short time.

Patients who have been diagnosed with heart failure should talk with their doctors about whether they might be candidates for an ICD.


Dr. Rosenfeld is an attending cardiologist with the Heart Institute at Yale-New Haven Hospital and associate professor of medicine and pediatrics at the Yale University School of Medicine.


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