Trends in Use and Adverse Outcomes Associated with Transvenous Lead Removal in the United States

Author:

Deshmukh Abhishek1,Patel Nileshkumar1,Noseworthy Peter A.1,Patel Achint A.1,Patel Nilay1,Arora Shilpkumar1,Kapa Suraj1,Noheria Amit1,Mulpuru Siva1,Badheka Apurva1,Fischer Avi1,Coffey James O.1,Cha Yong Mei1,Friedman Paul1,Asirvatham Samuel1,Viles-Gonzalez Juan F.1

Affiliation:

1. From Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN (A.D., P.A.N., S.K., A.N., S.M., Y.M.C., P.F., S. Asirvatham); University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL (N.P., J.O.C., J.F.V.-G.); Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY (A.A.P., S. Arora); Yale New Haven Medical Center, New Haven, CT (A.B.); St. Jude Medical, Sylmar, CA (A.F.); and Saint Peter’s University Hospital/Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ (N.P.).

Abstract

Background— Transvenous lead removal (TLR) has made significant progress with respect to innovation, efficacy, and safety. However, limited data exist regarding trends in use and adverse outcomes outside the centers of considerable experience for TLR. The aim of our study was to examine use patterns, frequency of adverse events, and influence of hospital volume on complications. Methods and Results— Using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, we identified 91 890 TLR procedures. We investigated common complications including pericardial complications (hemopericardium, cardiac tamponade, or pericardiocentesis), pneumothorax, stroke, vascular complications (consisting of hemorrhage/hematoma, incidents requiring surgical repair, and accidental arterial puncture), and in-hospital deaths described with TLR, defining them by the validated International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification diagnosis code. We specifically assessed in-hospital death (2.2%), hemorrhage requiring transfusion (2.6%), vascular complications (2.0%), pericardial complications (1.4%), open heart surgery (0.2%), and postoperative respiratory failure (2.4%). Independent predictors of complications were female sex and device infections. Hospital volume was not independently associated with higher complications. There was a significant rise in overall complication rates over the study period. Conclusions— The overall complication rate in patients undergoing TLR was higher than previously reported. Female sex and device infections are associated with higher complications. Hospital volume was not associated with higher complication rates. The number of adverse events in the literature likely underestimates the actual number of complications associated with TLR.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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