Heart rate distribution in paced and non-paced patients with severe recurrent reflex syncope and tilt-induced asystole: Findings from the BIOSync CLS study

Background: Undiagnosed sinus or atrioventricular node dysfunction may bias estimation of the real efficacy of cardiac pacing in preventing vasovagal reflex syncope. We assessed this hypothesis in the BIOSync CLS trial which showed that dual-chamber pacing with closed loop stimulation (CLS) remarkab...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Russo, Vincenzo, Anguera Camós, Ignasi, Lange, Frederik J. de, Ruvo, Ermenegildo de, Taieb, Jérôme, Zardini, Marco, Nigro, Gerardo, Giacopelli, Daniele, Gargaro, Alessio, Brignole, Michele
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2021
País:España
Institución:Universidad de Barcelona
Repositorio:Dipòsit Digital de la UB
OAI Identifier:oai:diposit.ub.edu:2445/178787
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/2445/178787
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:Marcapassos
Síncope (Patologia)
Assaigs clínics
Cardiac pacemakers
Syncope (Pathology)
Clinical trials
Descripción
Sumario:Background: Undiagnosed sinus or atrioventricular node dysfunction may bias estimation of the real efficacy of cardiac pacing in preventing vasovagal reflex syncope. We assessed this hypothesis in the BIOSync CLS trial which showed that dual-chamber pacing with closed loop stimulation (CLS) remarkably reduced recurrences of syncope. Methods and results: In the study patients aged 40 years or older with ≥2 episodes of loss of consciousness in the last year and an asystolic response to Tilt-Table test were randomized to pacing ON (DDD-CLS mode) or pacing OFF (ODO mode). We utilized the available pacemaker diagnostic data in a total of 103 patients (52 pacing ON, 51 pacing OFF) to generate cumulative distribution charts for heart rate (HR) and percentage of pacing. At 12 months, we did not find evidence of suspected sinus or atrioventricular node dysfunction. Beats were similarly distributed between groups (p = 0.96), with an average HR of 76 ± 8 bpm (pacing ON) versus 77 ± 7 bpm (pacing OFF). In the active group, the median percentage of atrial and ventricular pacing was 47% and 0%, respectively. Intolerance to high pacing rates was reported in only one patient (1.6%) and was easily resolved by reprogramming the maximum CLS pacing rate. Conclusions: We did not find evidence of suspected sinus or atrioventricular node dysfunction in the BIOSync CLS patients. The benefit of pacing should be ascribed to pacing prevention of pure vasovagal episodes. CLS algorithm modulated pacing rates over a wide frequency range, consistently competing with sinus node.