Conference Coverage

Leadless pacemaker matches conventional transvenous outcomes

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Leadless pacing shows promise

Pacemaker leads are the “Achilles’ heel” of pacing and defibrillation systems, so a self-contained, leadless pacemaker that can be placed directly into the heart is an appealing prospect.

Although newer devices such as this one can be used only for single-chamber ventricular pacing and therefore will have limited usefulness for the majority of pacemaker recipients, these encouraging short-term results show the promise of leadless pacing.

Dr. Mark S. Link is with the cardiac arrhythmia service at Tufts Medical Center, Boston. These comments were taken from an accompanying editorial (N Engl J Med. 2015, Nov 9. doi: 10.1056/NEJMe1513625). No conflicts of interest were declared.


 

AT THE AHA SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS

References

ORLANDO – A leadless transcatheter pacemaker rivals conventional transvenous pacemakers in terms of pacing capture and major complications, according to data presented at the American Heart Association scientific sessions and published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The prospective multicenter study involved 725 patients requiring ventricular pacing, of whom 719 were successful implanted with the leadless Micra Transcatheter Pacemaking System and followed for 6 months.

Of the 297 patients included in the primary efficacy analysis, 98.3% showed a 6-month pacing capture threshold of no greater than 2.0 V, with a mean pacing capture threshold at implantation of 0.63 V and 0.54 V at 6 months.

The leadless device also was associated with half the incidence of major complications, compared with data from a historical control cohort (4% vs. 7.4%; hazard ratio, 0.49; P = .001), as well as fewer hospitalizations and fewer system revisions due to complications.

“Complications that lead to death or that required invasive revision, termination of therapy, or hospitalization or extension of hospitalization occurred in 4% of the patients; this finding is in line with recent reports of transvenous systems and was significantly lower than the rate in the control group,” wrote Dr. Dwight Reynolds of the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, and coauthors (N Engl J Med. Nov 9. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1511643).

The study was supported by Micra manufacturer Medtronic. Most authors reported personal fees, grants, and advisory board positions from private industry, including Medtronic. Two authors are Medtronic employees.

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