Prophylactic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator in the very elderly
EP Europace Journal

Abstract
Current guidelines do not propose any age cut-off for the primary prevention implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). However, the risk/benefit balance in the very elderly population has not been well studied.
In a multicentre French study assessing patients implanted with an ICD for primary prevention, outcomes among patients aged ≥80 years were compared with <80 years old controls matched for sex and underlying heart disease (ischaemic and dilated cardiomyopathy). A total of 300 ICD recipients were enrolled in this specific analysis, including 150 patients ≥80 years (mean age 81.9 ± 2.0 years; 86.7% males) and 150 controls (mean age 61.8 ± 10.8 years). Among older patients, 92 (75.6%) had no more than one associated comorbidity. Most subjects in the elderly group got an ICD as part of a cardiac resynchronization therapy procedure (74% vs. 46%,
Primary prevention ICD recipients ≥80 years in the real world had relatively low associated comorbidity. Rates of appropriate therapies and device-related complications were similar, compared with younger subjects. Nevertheless, the inherent limitations in interpreting observational data on this particular competing risk situation call for randomized controlled trials to provide definitive answers. Meanwhile, a careful multidisciplinary evaluation is needed to guide patient selection for ICD implantation in the elderly population.
Contributors

Cyril Zakine
Author

Rodrigue Garcia
Author

Kumar Narayanan
Author

Estelle Gandjbakhch
Author

Vincent Algalarrondo
Author

Nicolas Lellouche
Author

Marie-Cécile Perier
Author

Laurent Fauchier
Author

Daniel Gras
Author

Pierre Bordachar
Author

Olivier Piot
Author

Dominique Babuty
Author

Nicolas Sadoul
Author

Pascal Defaye
Author

Jean-Claude Deharo
Author

Didier Klug
Author

Christophe Leclercq
Author

Fabrice Extramiana
Author

Serge Boveda
Author

