News Release

Most eligible patients miss out on cardiac resynchronization therapy for heart failure

CRT device use varies widely, large-scale study finds

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of South Florida (USF Health)

Dr. Anne Curtis, University of South Florida Health

image: Dr. Anne Curtis, chair of cardiology at the University of South Florida in Tampa, Fla., led the national study. view more 

Credit: University of South Florida

Tampa, FL (Dec. 11, 2009) -- Most patients with heart failure likely to benefit from a pacemaker including the capacity for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) do not receive such an implantable device, reports a national study in the December 2009 issue of the American Heart Journal. Less than half who qualify for the device therapy may actually get it, the large-scale study led by University of South Florida cardiologist Anne Curtis, MD, found.

The researchers also reported widespread variations in CRT use for eligible patients by practice setting and patient characteristics despite national guidelines and evidence from clinical trials supporting the therapy.

Heart failure – impairment in the heart's ability to pump blood through the body – affects more than 5 million Americans and is expected to increase as the population ages. Some patients with severe heart failure have hearts that are not only weak and inefficient, but also beat in a disorganized, or unsynchronized, way. Studies have shown that these patients, who are at high risk for sudden death, benefit greatly from CRT to help their hearts beat with proper timing.

"Our study shows great variability among doctors and practices with respect to how many eligible patients actually receive cardiac resynchronization therapy for heart failure," said lead author Dr. Curtis, professor and chair of cardiology at USF Health.

"Since resynchronization therapy can help patients with heart failure feel better and improve outcomes, it is important to continue our efforts to get this information out and improve access to effective medical treatments."

The study drew on more than 15,000 heart failure patients from 167 U.S. cardiology practices enrolled in the Registry to Improve the Use of Evidence-Based Heart Failure Therapies in the Outpatient Setting (IMPROVE HF).

Only 38.8 percent of the 1,373 patients in the registry who fit the criteria for receiving CRT were implanted with a CRT-capable device, the authors reported. Four-fifths of this group received a pacemaker combining resynchronization therapy with a defibrillator (CRT-D) to shock the heart if it stopped suddenly, and the rest got a pacing-only device (CRT-P)

"Notably, ICD (implantable cardiac defibrillator) implantation rates were higher (50 percent) for patients eligible for CRT but not treated for CRT," the authors wrote, "which is not well aligned to evidence showing greater magnitude of benefit from CRT."

Use of CRT among the 167 cardiology practices in IMROVE HF ranged for none to 100 percent of eligible patients. A few factors emerged as significant predictors in the analysis: sex, cause of heart failure, other complicating illnesses, and clinical and laboratory markers were not among them. Among patients treated with CRT, older patient age, female sex, device-clinic affiliated practices and single specialty were associated with the use of CRT-P rather than CRT-D.

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The IMPROVE HF registry and study is sponsored by Medtronic, Inc., and study authors served as consultants to Medtronic. All study data was collected and analyzed by an independent clinical research organization.

Study authors included cardiologists from Baylor University Medical School, Campbell University School of Pharmacy (Research Triangle Park, NC), the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Duke University Medical Center, Outcome Sciences Inc (Cambridge, MA), Northwestern University, Scripps Clinic (La Jolla, CA), University of Maryland, The Care Group, LLC (Indianapolis, IN), University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center; and UCLA Medical Center.

- USF Health -

USF Health is dedicated to creating a model of health care based on understanding the full spectrum of health. It includes the University of South Florida's colleges of medicine, nursing, and public health; the schools of biomedical sciences as well as physical therapy & rehabilitation sciences; and the USF Physicians Group. With more than $380.3 million in research grants and contracts last year, USF is one of the nation's top 63 public research universities and one of 39 community-engaged, four-year public universities designated by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. For more information, visit www.health.usf.edu


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