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Abstract 17155: Is Aortic Annular Calcium Burden a Predictor of Post TAVR Right Ventricular Pacing?

Authors :
Thomas Rosamond
Amit Shrestha
Sagar Ranka
Rhea Pimentel
Tarun Dalia
Nikhil Parimi
Seth H. Sheldon
Raghuveer Dendi
Tauseef Akhtar
Nachiket Apte
Madhu Reddy
Source :
Circulation. 142
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2020.

Abstract

Background: Preliminary reports have suggested the role of annular calcium in independently predicting pacemaker implantation after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). Data regarding role of calcium in the aortic-valvular complex on pacemaker dependency is lacking. Hypothesis: Calcium volume and score in the aortic annular region predicts RV (right ventricle) pacing burden. Methods: We conducted a retrospective single-center study at our tertiary care center including patients who had new pacemaker implantation after TAVR procedure (n=47). Standard calcium scoring software was used to demarcate and quantify the calcium along the aortic cusps and subvalvular region and dichotomized into septal and non-septal based on proximity to the interventricular septum. Standard statistical tests were used for analysis with two-sided p-value Results: The mean age was 78.6 ± 10.3 years and females were 42.6%. At baseline, 44.7% had narrow QRS complex, with 31.9% had right bundle branch block (RBBB), 8.5% had left bundle branch block (LBBB). Median Pre-TAVR QRS duration was 112 ms. Median septal and non-septal calcium score were 646 and 474 with a volume of 441 mm 3 and 327.2 mm 3 , respectively. Patients with progression to complete heart block (CHB) during index admission had significantly higher non-septal volume (650 mm 3 vs 344 mm 3 ;p=0.01) and score (892 vs 485;p=0.01) when compared to progression after discharge. Similarly, the high burden of RV pacing (>40%) was associated with lower septal calcium score (989 vs 552, p= 0.03) and volume (717 mm 3 vs 385 mm 3 , p=0.03) within 3 months of TAVR. No septal or non-septal parameters were predictive of pacing burden for mid-term (3-12 months) and long-term (>12 months) follow up. Septal calcium parameters were not predictive of RV pacing burden or progression to CHB. Conclusion: Quantitative calcium in the non-septal and septal regions were predictive of early progression to CHB and a higher burden of RV pacing, respectively. Larger scale studies on calcium distribution and the burden should be performed to validate our findings.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
142
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bf7971ed492a5ecf4a01b4a29ce5a8d1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/circ.142.suppl_3.17155