Methods: Between February 1998 and August 2014, we retrospectively analyzed the data of 212 consecutive patients (147 males, 65 females; mean age 39.6±15 years; range 5 to 65 years) who underwent heart transplantation with biatrial cuff technique in our clinic. Baseline characteristics and postoperative data were compared among the patients who required a pacemaker or did not.
Results: The incidence of permanent pacing after heart transplantation was 6.4%. The most frequent reason for permanent pacing was symptomatic bradycardia. Previous cardiac surgery was associated with a non-significant trend toward a need for permanent pacing (p=0.056). The presence of a ventricular assist device was a found to be associated with both prolonged temporary and permanent pacemaker requirement after biatrial cardiac transplantation (p=0.021 and p=0.042, respectively).
Conclusion: Although bradyarrhythmia and need for temporary pacing were common in the early postoperative period, few of these patients needed permanent pacemaker implantation. The need for a permanent pacemaker seems to be more frequent after challenging operations, such as bridge to heart transplantation with a long-term ventricular assist device.
In this study, we aimed to determine the incidence of cardiac pacing in our cardiac transplant population and to identify patient characteristics or events which may predict which patients will require pacing after biatrial cardiac transplantation.
Table 1: Baseline clinical characteristics of heart transplant recipients
A total of 100 patients (47.2%) experienced relative bradycardia requiring prolonged temporary pacing after transplantation during the first 24 hours of intensive care unit follow-up. Permanent pacemaker was placed in 13 patients (6.4%) after biatrial orthotopic heart transplantation. While 10 patients required early implantation before discharge (mean time 16.6±12.2 days), three patients required late implantation (mean time 2169±167.1 days) during long-term follow-up. There was no difference in the development of coronary allograft vasculopathy or rejection episodes at the time of PPM implantation.
Among the patients who needed PPM, five (38.4%) had PPM implantation during early postoperative period due to bradycardia and hemodynamic instability requiring continuous temporary pacing support. Two patients (15.4%) had third-degree atrioventricular block, two (15.4%) had junctional rhythm requiring PPM, and one patient (7.7%) needed an implantable cardioverter defibrillator due to recurrent ventricular arrhythmia. Indications for PPM implantation in the late postoperative period included sinus node dysfunction, complete atrioventricular block, and symptomatic bradycardia.
The comparisons of the recipient age, donor age, cardiac ischemic time, CPB time duration, baseline pulmonary vascular wedge pressure, and mean pulmonary arterial pressure between two groups are shown in Table 2.
Postoperative prolonged temporary pacemaker was associated with higher PPM rates (p=0.027). Prolonged temporary pacemaker requirement was significant (p=0.017), whereas PPM requirement was slightly, but non-significantly (p=0.056) more frequent in patients with a history of cardiac surgery (i.e. coronary artery bypass grafting, valve replacement, congenital correction and VAD implantation). The subgroup analysis showed that the presence of VAD was correlated with both prolonged temporary pacemaker and PPM implantation (p=0.021 and p=0.042, respectively).
Furthermore, in our study, symptomatic bradycardia was the most common reason for PPM implantation. In case of symptomatic bradycardia requiring prolonged temporary pacing, theophylline was administered before PPM implantation. There were no significant differences in cardiac ischemic time, CPB time duration, baseline pulmonary vascular wedge pressure, and the mean pulmonary arterial pressure among the patients who required pacemaker implantation and did not. Several studies reported ischemic time as the main cause of postoperative sinus node dysfunction,[1,5] while some authors[14,15] demonstrated no correlation between ischemic time and a subsequent need for pacing.
In addition, most studies reported an increased incidence of PPM with the biatrial technique.[2,4,8] Randomized trials also showed that permanent pacing requirement reduced with bicaval technique.[9-11] The bicaval technique of orthotopic heart transplantation, in contrast to the biatrial technique, is considered to better preserve the right atrial anatomy and, thus, is associated with less sinus node dysfunction. Metaanalyses of prospective trials revealed significant superiority of the bicaval technique in comparison to the biatrial procedure for sinus rhythm.[16] Meyer et al.[10] showed significant reduction in the need for PPM insertion at 30 days (biatrial vs. bicaval 13% vs. 0%, p=0.008) and 90 days (17% vs. 1.8% p=0.01) posttransplantation with the bicaval technique. However, variable results were attained from studies comparing bicaval and biatrial anastomosis for regarding a pacemaker need. For instance, in a study of bicaval anastomosis, pacing was not required in any of 100 consecutive patients.[17] In two randomized trials, permanent pacing was not required in any patients undergoing bicaval anastomosis, but in five (6.7%) of 75 patients undergoing biatrial anastomosis.[18,19] Our cohort was comprised of those undergoing biatrial orthotopic heart transplantation, and our results are in consistent with the literature data.
The patients with a history of cardiac surgery tended to require PPM (p=0.056) in our study. When analyzed on its own, the presence of VAD was associated with PPM requirement (p=0.042). These results may indicate that besides the prior history of cardiac surgery, bridge to transplantation, in particular, may be a risk factor PPM. We believe that the surgical challenge caused by dense adhesions secondary to prior cardiac surgery might have yielded such a result.
Our study had some limitations due to its retrospective nature and small sample size. Pacing criteria were clinically derived and some data were limited by loss to follow-up.
In c onclusion, a lthough b radyarrhythmia w as common in the early postoperative period after biatrial technique and prolonged temporary pacing is commonly required, few patients needed PPM implantation. As surgical technique seems to be a major predictor of who will be more likely to require permanent pacing, the presence of VAD results in more challenging surgery and may lead to pacing postoperatively.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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