Sudden cardiac death after myocardial infarction: individual participant data from pooled cohorts

European Heart Journal

8 October 2024
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ESC Journals ARRHYTHMIAS AND DEVICE THERAPY HEART FAILURE Chronic Heart Failure Device Therapy

Abstract

AbstractBackground and Aims

Risk stratification of sudden cardiac death after myocardial infarction and prevention by defibrillator rely on left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). Improved risk stratification across the whole LVEF range is required for decision-making on defibrillator implantation.

Methods

The analysis pooled 20 data sets with 140 204 post-myocardial infarction patients containing information on demographics, medical history, clinical characteristics, biomarkers, electrocardiography, echocardiography, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. Separate analyses were performed in patients (i) carrying a primary prevention cardioverter-defibrillator with LVEF ≤ 35% [implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) patients], (ii) without cardioverter-defibrillator with LVEF ≤ 35% (non-ICD patients ≤ 35%), and (iii) without cardioverter-defibrillator with LVEF > 35% (non-ICD patients >35%). Primary outcome was sudden cardiac death or, in defibrillator carriers, appropriate defibrillator therapy. Using a competing risk framework and systematic internal–external cross-validation, a model using LVEF only, a multivariable flexible parametric survival model, and a multivariable random forest survival model were developed and externally validated. Predictive performance was assessed by random effect meta-analysis.

Results

There were 1326 primary outcomes in 7543 ICD patients, 1193 in 25 058 non-ICD patients ≤35%, and 1567 in 107 603 non-ICD patients >35% during mean follow-up of 30.0, 46.5, and 57.6 months, respectively. In these three subgroups, LVEF poorly predicted sudden cardiac death (c-statistics between 0.50 and 0.56). Considering additional parameters did not improve calibration and discrimination, and model generalizability was poor.

Conclusions

More accurate risk stratification for sudden cardiac death and identification of low-risk individuals with severely reduced LVEF or of high-risk individuals with preserved LVEF was not feasible, neither using LVEF nor using other predictors.

Contributors

Rob J van der Geest
Rob J van der Geest

Author

Leiden University Medical Center Leiden , Netherlands (The)

Alireza Sepehri Shamloo
Alireza Sepehri Shamloo

Author

Charité - University Medicine Berlin Berlin , Germany

Tim Friede
Tim Friede

Author

University Medical Centre of Gottingen (UMG) Goettingen , Germany

Josef Kautzner
Josef Kautzner

Author

Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine (IKEM) Prague , Czechia

Lluis Mont
Lluis Mont

Author

Hospital Clinic of Barcelona Barcelona , Spain

Gianluca Pontone
Gianluca Pontone

Author

Monzino Cardiology Centre Milan , Italy

Ivo Roca
Ivo Roca

Author

Christian Sticherling
Christian Sticherling

Author

University Hospital Basel Basel , Switzerland

Jacob Tfelt-Hansen
Jacob Tfelt-Hansen

Author

Rigshospitalet - Copenhagen University Hospital Copenhagen , Denmark

Nikolaos Dagres
Nikolaos Dagres

Author

Charité - University Medicine Berlin Berlin , Germany

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