Impact of age on hospital outcomes after catheter ablation for ventricular tachycardia

Author:

Tan Min Choon12ORCID,Yeo Yong Hao3ORCID,Ang Qi Xuan4,Kiwan Chrystina2,Fatunde Olubadewa1,Lee Justin Z.5,Tolat Aneesh6,Sorajja Dan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Mayo Clinic Phoenix Arizona USA

2. Department of Internal Medicine New York Medical College at Saint Michael's Medical Center Newark New Jersey USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine/Pediatrics William Beaumont University Hospital Royal Oak Michigan USA

4. Department of Internal Medicine Sparrow Health System and Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

5. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio USA

6. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Hartford Healthcare/University of Connecticut Hartford Connecticut USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe real‐world data on the safety profile of ventricular tachycardia (VT) ablation among elderly patients is not well‐established. This study aimed to evaluate the procedural outcomes among those aged 18–64 years versus those aged ≥65 years who underwent catheter ablation of VT.MethodUsing the Nationwide Readmissions Database, our study included patients aged ≥18 years who underwent VT catheter ablation between 2017 and 2020. We divided the patients into non‐elderly (18–64 years old) and elderly age groups (≥65 years old). We then analyzed the in‐hospital procedural outcome and 30‐day readmission between these two groups.ResultsOur study included 2075 (49.1%) non‐elderly patients and 2153 (50.9%) elderly patients who underwent VT ablation. Post‐procedurally, elderly patients had significantly higher rates of prolonged index hospitalization (≥7 days; 35.5% vs. 29.3%, p < .01), non‐home discharge (13.4% vs. 6.0%, p < .01), 30‐day readmission (17.0% vs. 11.4%, p < .01), and early mortality (5.5% vs. 2.4%, p < .01). There was no significant difference in the procedural complications between two groups, namely vascular complications, hemopericardium/cardiac tamponade, cerebrovascular accident (CVA), major bleeding requiring blood transfusion, and systemic embolization. Through multivariable analysis, the elderly group was associated with higher odds of early mortality (OR: 7.50; CI 1.86–30.31, p = .01), non‐home discharge (OR: 2.41; CI: 1.93–3.00, p < .01) and 30‐day readmission (OR: 1.58; CI 1.32–1.89, p < .01).ConclusionElderly patients have worse in‐hospital outcome, early mortality, non‐home discharge, and 30‐day readmission following catheter ablation for VT. There was no significant difference between elderly and non‐elderly groups in the procedural complications.

Publisher

Wiley

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