Incidence, Predictors, and Outcomes of Implantable Cardioverter‐Defibrillator Discharge Among People Living With HIV

Author:

Alvi Raza M.12,Neilan Anne M.3,Tariq Noor4,Awadalla Magid1,Rokicki Adam1,Hassan Malek1,Afshar Maryam2,Mulligan Connor P.1,Triant Virginia A.5,Zanni Markella V.6,Neilan Tomas G.17

Affiliation:

1. Cardiac MR PET CT Program Department of Radiology and Division of Cardiology Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA

2. Bronx‐Lebanon Hospital Center of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Bronx NY

3. Division of Infectious Diseases Department of Medicine and Department of Pediatrics Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA

4. Yale New Haven Hospital of Yale University School of Medicine New Haven CT

5. Divisions of Infectious Diseases and General Internal Medicine Department of Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA

6. Program in Nutritional Metabolism Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA

7. Division of Cardiology Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston MA

Abstract

Background People living with HIV ( PHIV ) are at an increased risk for sudden cardiac death, and implantable cardioverter‐defibrillators ( ICDs ) prevent SCD . There are no data on the incidence, predictors, and effects of ICD therapies among PHIV . Methods and Results We compared ICD discharge rates between 59 PHIV and 267 uninfected controls. For PHIV , we tested the association of traditional cardiovascular risk factors and HIV ‐specific parameters with an ICD discharge and then tested whether an ICD discharge among PHIV was associated with cardiovascular mortality or an admission for heart failure. The indication for ICD insertion was similar among groups. Compared with controls, PHIV with an ICD were more likely to have coronary artery disease and to use cocaine. In follow‐up, PHIV had a higher ICD discharge rate (39% versus 20%; P =0.001; median follow‐up period, 19 months). Among PHIV , cocaine use, coronary artery disease, QRS duration, and higher New York Heart Association class were associated with an ICD discharge. An ICD discharge had a prognostic effect, with a subsequent 1.7‐fold increase in heart failure admission and a 2‐fold increase in cardiovascular mortality, an effect consistent across racial/ethnic and sex categories. Conclusions ICD discharge rates are higher among PHIV compared with uninfected controls. Among PHIV , cocaine use and New York Heart Association class are associated with increased ICD discharge, and an ICD discharge is associated with a subsequent increase in admission for heart failure and cardiovascular mortality.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference47 articles.

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