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What Do Devices Tell Us? Laura Quinn Highly Specialist Cardiac Physiologist Northern General Hospital

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Page 1: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

What Do Devices Tell Us? Laura Quinn

Highly Specialist Cardiac Physiologist Northern General Hospital

Page 2: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ CRT ∗ What does it do? ∗ Who should get one? ∗ General Device Diagnostics ∗ Heart Failure Diagnostics ∗ CRT Optimisation Clinic

Overview

Page 3: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ With each subsequent HF related admission – patient leaves hospital with a further decrease in cardiac function

Worsening Heart Failure

Page 4: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Cardiac Resynchronisation Therapy (CRT) – Biventricular pacing

∗ Treating heart failure with an implantable device

∗ Improves heart ability to pump and promotes synchronized ventricular contraction

∗ Like a pacemaker but with an additional lead placed in coronary sinus that stimulates the left ventricle

∗ Single Therapy – CRT P ∗ Combined systems – Plus a

defibrillator – CRT D

Page 5: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

What does CRT do?

Ventricular Dyssynchrony Cardiac Resynchronisation

Right and left ventricles contract uniformly

Page 6: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ Improves pump efficiency ∗ Stroke volume increases ∗ Mitral regurgitation decreases ∗ HF symptoms ease and QOL improves ∗ Proven to reduce heart failure admissions ∗ Mechanical remodelling of LV

What does CRT do?

Page 7: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ Ventricular dyssynchrony – LBBB, Prolonged QRS duration >130ms

∗ NYHA class II, III or IV heart failure symptoms despite optimal medical therapy

∗ Low ejection fraction <35% ∗ Block HF – trial that found patients with AV block

(require high % of ventricular pacing) and had LV dysfunction benefitted from BiV pacing vs RV pacing

Who is a good candidate?

Page 8: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ Maintaining continuous BiV pacing (target 100%) is crucial and will increase likelihood of response.

∗ Seen in device clinic for routine follows up to ensure ongoing function of device

∗ Optimising CRT pacing parameters can help to increase cardiac output and ventricular filling.

CRT therapy

Page 9: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ Can be prescheduled or automatic alerts ∗ Home monitor box sits by patients bedside ∗ Every night device awakes to communicate with box ∗ If abnormalities have been occurring – information

gets downloaded to their box and sent via secure server to websites

∗ Physiologists check these websites daily

Remote monitoring

Page 10: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

General Device Data

Page 11: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Arrhythima’s

∗ Presented in two different ways

∗ EGM’s (intracardiac signals) if meets criteria programmed by device

∗ Duration of episode, heart rate

∗ What device thinks arrhythmia is

Page 12: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Arrhythmias

∗ Counter/trend data ∗ Arrhythmia burden over

time between sessions and from the overall history of device.

Page 13: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Rate Histograms and Percentages

∗ Provides data about conduction status

∗ Pacing and sensing percentages

∗ BiV pacing ∗ Heart rate distributions ∗ Chronotropic response ∗ Rate control during AF ∗ Changes between sessions

Page 14: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Heart Failure Diagnostics

Page 15: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Diagnostics in Heart Failure

∗ Can provide an early warning of congestion

∗ Can provide additional insight to try and reduce re-hospitalisation rate

∗ Can follow response to treatment

Page 16: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Patterns to Decompensation

Hospitalisation

Cardiac Output

Left Atrial Pressure Sympathetic Nervous Activity

Pulmonary Fluid

Weight

Symptoms Activity

Sensor on devices Heart Rate Variability Thoracic Impedance Activity

Page 17: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ CRT devices display some data together in trend graphs so that you can see multiple sensor measurements together to help in diagnostic process

∗ Increases in Night heart rate and decrease in heart rate variability

∗ Thoracic Impedance – can be indicator of increase in fluid retention

∗ Decrease in patients activity levels – accelerometer inside devices can track patients activity daily which correlates to patient symptoms.

∗ Algorithms can use all this data to alert us to a potential event.

Trend data

Page 18: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Thoracic Impedance

• Thoracic impedance is based on the principle that water is a relatively good conductor of electrical current. Thus, electrical conductance through body tissues varies according to the water content of the tissue.

• If fluid retention goes up, impedance goes down and if fluid retention goes down, impedance goes up.

• There are many factors that can cause an

impedance increase or decrease. Therefore, a threshold crossing is not always an indicator of a heart failure decompensation

Page 19: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

Triage Heart Failure

∗ We have implemented these diagnostics into our remote follow up service

∗ Currently with Sheffield and Chesterfield with hopes to expand

∗ Patient alerts as high risk of a heart failure event from remote follow up

∗ Email the appropriate Specialist Heart Failure Nurse

∗ Specialist Heart Failure Nurses have access to the heart failure risk report

∗ Assess patients status and treatment

Page 20: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ Aim: Proactively eliminate common causes of CRT non-response ∗ Multi disciplinary clinic ∗ Patients with newly implanted CRT devices ∗ Pre implant - Echo, 6 minute walk test and a QOL assessment

questionnaire. ∗ Six weeks - Seen by Specialist Cardiac Physiologists and

Specialist Heart failure nurses ∗ Device is fully optimised and tailored to patient ∗ Remote monitor is given ∗ Medication is reviewed and up- titrated if necessary

CRT Optimisation Clinic

Page 21: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ 5 months – Repeat Echo to look for remodelling ∗ 6months – Patient comes back to CRT Opt. Clinic ∗ Ensure device is fully optimised, reviewed again by Specialist

Heart Failure Nurses ∗ Repeat QOL questionnaire and repeat 6minute walk ∗ All indices are compared at 6months to pre implant to assess the

response to therapy ∗ Functional response, mechanical response and symptomatic

response ∗ 2 out of 3 have improved – classed as a responder to CRT ∗ If classed as a non responder – responsible consultant is

informed to assess if anything further can be done.

CRT Optimisation Clinic

Page 22: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

CRT Optimisation Clinic

∗ Ensures that all CRT patients are receiving the best possible chance to respond to this therapy in a very streamlined and timely way

∗ Standardised approach

Page 23: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home
Page 24: Heart Failure Day - Sheffield Teaching Hospital - Home

∗ Adamson PB. Pathophysiology of the transition from chronic compensated and acute decompensated heart failure: new insights from continuous monitoring

devices. Curr Heart Fail Rep. 2009;6:287–292.

∗ Adamson PB, Smith AL, Abraham WT, et al.: Continuous autonomic assessment in patients with symptomatic heart failure: prognostic value of heart rate

variability measured by an implanted cardiac resynchronization device. Circulation 2004, 110:2389–2394.

∗ Adamson PB, Kleckner KJ, VanHout WL, et al.: Cardiac resynchronization therapy improves heart rate variability inpatient with symptomatic heart failure.

Circulation 2003, 108:266–269.

∗ Yu CM, Wang L, Chau E, et al.: Intrathoracic impedance monitoring in patients with heart failure: correlation with fluid status and feasibility of early warning

preceding hospitalization. Circulation 2005, 112:841–848.

∗ Small R, Wickemeyer W, Germany R, et al.: Changes in intrathoracic impedance are associated with subsequent risk of hospitalizations for acute decompensated heart failure: clinical utility of implanted device monitoring without a patient alert. J Card Fail 2009, 15:475–481.

∗ McAllister F, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2009; 150:784-794

∗ Swedberg K, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2012; 59:1938-45

∗ Cullington D, et al. Eur J Heart Fail (2012) 14 (7): 737-747

∗ McAllister F, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2009; 150:784-794

∗ Swedberg K, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2012; 59:1938-45

∗ Cullington D, et al. Eur J Heart Fail (2012) 14 (7): 737-747

∗ Uçar FM, Yilmaztepe MA, Taylan G, Aktoz M. Non-Sustained Ventricular Tachycardia Episodes Predict Future Hospitalization in ICD Recipients with Heart Failure.

Arq Bras Cardiol. 2017 Oct;109(4):284-289. doi: 10.5935/abc.20170141.

∗ Steven A. Lubitz, Jagmeet P. Singh; Biventricular pacing: more is better!, European Heart Journal, Volume 36, Issue 7, 14 February 2015, Pages 407–409,

∗ Lechat P, Hulot JS, Escolano S, Mallet A, Leizorovicz A, Werhlen-Grandjean M, Pochmalicki G, Dargie H. Heart rate and cardiac rhythm relationships with bisoprolol

benefit in chronic heart failure in CIBIS II Trial. Circulation. 2001 Mar 13;103(10):1428-33. ∗ Swedberg, Karl et al. Ivabradine and outcomes in chronic heart failure (SHIFT): a randomised placebo-controlled study The Lancet , Volume 376 , Issue 9744 , 875 -

885

References