Is Resynchronization Pacing Proarrhythmic Among Congenital Heart Patients? An Evaluation and Review
Peter P. Karpawich, Kathleen Zelin, Corinne Biggs, Swati Sehgal, Jennifer Blake, Chenni Sriram, Pooja Gupta

TL;DR
This study examines whether cardiac resynchronization therapy increases arrhythmia risk in congenital heart disease patients over 20 years.
Contribution
The study provides long-term evidence on CRT safety in CHD patients, addressing a gap in understanding proarrhythmic risks in younger populations.
Findings
CRT improved 10-year survival free from death or heart transplant compared to medical management.
No new-onset arrhythmias were observed in either CRT or medical management groups.
Pre-existing arrhythmias were linked to adverse outcomes in some CRT recipients.
Abstract
Background: Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) can be an effective form of heart failure (HF) management among congenital heart disease (CHD) patients (pts) with and without surgically repaired defects. However, very long-term results are limited. Recently, CRT has been implicated to be proarrhythmic among older CRT recipients. This issue is largely unknown among younger CHD-CRT pts. This study presents up to a 20-year (y) continuous review of any arrhythmia (Arr) burden associated with CRT among CHD-HF pts. Methods: From 1999 to 2024, outcomes of 45 CHD-HF pts (NYHA II-IV) (age 4–57 y [mean 26]; 31% female) were compared between those on established medical management (MM) (n = 18) and CRT recipients (n = 27) followed continuously for 1–20 years. Pre-existing and any de novo Arr that occurred following CRT were documented. Clinical assessments were continuous. Results: Follow-up…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac pacing and defibrillation studies · Congenital Heart Disease Studies · Mechanical Circulatory Support Devices
