双腔室和VVI植入式除颤器(DAVID)试验:原理、设计、结果、临床意义和对未来试验的教训。

Bruce L Wilkoff
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引用次数: 51

摘要

双室和VVI植入式除颤器(DAVID)试验随机分配了506例患者,并检验了双室起搏模式可以改善血液动力学的假设,从而减少充血性心力衰竭、心力衰竭住院、心力衰竭死亡、心房颤动、中风、室性心律失常和总死亡率,与需要植入式除颤器治疗的患者相比。患者有植入式除颤器治疗的一级预防指征(47%)或二级预防指征(53%),但没有心动过缓起搏器支持的指征。所有患者均有中度至重度左心室功能障碍,左心室射血分数为40%或更低(平均= 27%),并持续接受血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂或血管紧张素II受体阻滞剂(86%)和β肾上腺素能阻滞剂(85%)的治疗。与随机选择心室备用起搏的患者(13.3%)相比,采用双室起搏模式的患者(22.6%)一年内因充血性心力衰竭或死亡住院的主要联合终点矛盾地增加,且具有统计学意义(p = 0.03)。心力衰竭住院治疗和死亡率都对结果有影响。另一种观点认为,这是一项随机对照研究,研究左心室功能障碍患者是否接受起搏器治疗,以及植入式除颤器治疗的适应症。心室后备起搏产生不到3%的心室起搏和无心房起搏,而双室起搏产生大约60%的心房和心室起搏。双室起搏组的不良预后与右室起搏百分比相关,提示右室起搏导致心室非同步化。DAVID试验的对照组右心室起搏与内在激活相关的不良结果与心脏再同步化试验的干预组中对照组与双心室起搏相关的延长脑室内传导激活相关的不良结果相似。这些结果的直接结论是,有植入式除颤器适应症而无起搏适应症的患者不应采用双室起搏模式。结论认为只应植入单室植入式除颤器是不恰当的。植入心房导联还有其他潜在的优势,包括改善次要预后。然而,DAVID试验结果表明,双室节律模式与生活质量的改善、住院次数的减少、除颤器的不适当电击或房颤无关。更重要的问题是这些患者的最佳起搏模式是什么?DAVID II研究正在研究AAIR模式,试图确定一种保持房室同步、正常房室时间、防止心动过缓和防止右心室刺激的起搏模式。需要注意的是,不应将这些结果直接应用于有起搏器治疗指征的患者或有心脏再同步化治疗指征的患者,因为这两个人群的患者都没有被纳入。然而,考虑到DAVID试验中与双室起搏相关的巨大有害影响,未来的研究应该探索左心室刺激可能是唯一能够预防心动过缓而不增加死亡和充血性心力衰竭的起搏模式的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Dual Chamber and VVI Implantable Defibrillator (DAVID) Trial: rationale, design, results, clinical implications and lessons for future trials.

T he Dual Chamber and VVI Implantable Defibrillator (DAVID) trial randomized 506 patients and tested the hypothesis that the dual-chamber pacing mode would produce improved hemodynamics and would in turn reduce congestive heart failure, heart failure hospitalizations, heart failure deaths, atrial fibrillation, strokes, ventricular arrhythmias, and total mortality compared to backup ventricular pacing in patients indicated for implantable defibrillator therapy. Patients had either primary prevention indications (47%) or secondary prevention indications (53%) for implantable defibrillator therapy but had no indications for bradycardia pacemaker support. All the patients had moderate to severe left ventricular dysfunction with a left ventricular ejection fraction of 40% or less (mean = 27%) and were consistently treated with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin II receptor blockers (86%) and beta adrenergic blocking agents (85%). The primary combined endpoint of hospitalization for congestive heart failure or death was paradoxically increased and statistically significant ( p = 0.03) at one year in the patients paced in the dual chamber mode (22.6%) compared to patients randomized to ventricular backup pacing (13.3%). Both heart failure hospitalization and mortality contributed outcome. Another perspective would consider this a randomized controlled study of presence or absence of pacemaker therapy in patients with left ventricular dysfunction and indications for implantable defibrillator therapy. Ventricular backup pacing produced less than 3% ventricular and no atrial pacing, while dual chamber pacing produced approximately 60% atrial and ventricular paced heart beats. The poor outcome in the dual chamber paced group correlated with the percentage of right ventricular pacing and suggests that right ventricular pacing caused ventricular dyssynchrony. The poor outcome associated with right ventricular pacing compared to intrinsic activation in the control group of the DAVID trial is reminiscent of the poor outcome associated with prolonged intraventricular conduction activation in the control groups compared to biventricular pacing in the intervention groups of the cardiac resynchronization trials. The direct conclusion from these results are that patients with indications for implantable defibrillators and no indication for pacing should not be paced in the dual chamber pacing mode. It is not appropriate to conclude that only single chamber implantable defibrillators should be implanted. There are other potential advantages to having an implanted atrial lead including improved secondary outcomes. However the DAVID trial results suggest that the dual chamber paced mode was not associated with improved quality of life or decreased frequency of hospitalization, inappropriate shocks from the defibrillator or atrial fibrillation. The more important question is what is the optimal pacing mode in these patients? The AAIR mode is under investigation in the DAVID II study in an attempt to identify a pacing mode that preserves atrio-ventricular synchrony, normal atrio-ventricular timing, prevents bradycardia and also prevents right ventricular stimulation. Caution should be taken to not directly apply these results to patients with either an indication for pacemaker therapy or to patients with an indication for cardiac resynchronization therapy since patients from neither population were included. However, considering the large magnitude of the deleterious effects associated with dual chamber pacing in the DAVID trial future studies should explore the possibility that left ventricular stimulation may be the only pacing mode capable of preventing bradycardia without increasing death and congestive heart failure.

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