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Clinical Trial
. 2014 Apr 8;129(14):1466-71.
doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.113.006987. Epub 2014 Mar 24.

Permanent leadless cardiac pacing: results of the LEADLESS trial

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Permanent leadless cardiac pacing: results of the LEADLESS trial

Vivek Y Reddy et al. Circulation. .

Abstract

Background: Conventional cardiac pacemakers are associated with several potential short- and long-term complications related to either the transvenous lead or subcutaneous pulse generator. We tested the safety and clinical performance of a novel, completely self-contained leadless cardiac pacemaker.

Methods and results: The primary safety end point was freedom from complications at 90 days. Secondary performance end points included implant success rate, implant time, and measures of device performance (pacing/sensing thresholds and rate-responsive performance). The mean age of the patient cohort (n=33) was 77±8 years, and 67% of the patients were male (n=22/33). The most common indication for cardiac pacing was permanent atrial fibrillation with atrioventricular block (n=22, 67%). The implant success rate was 97% (n=32). Five patients (15%) required the use of >1 leadless cardiac pacemaker during the procedure. One patient developed right ventricular perforation and cardiac tamponade during the implant procedure, and eventually died as the result of a stroke. The overall complication-free rate was 94% (31/33). After 3 months of follow-up, the measures of pacing performance (sensing, impedance, and pacing threshold) either improved or were stable within the accepted range.

Conclusions: In a prospective nonrandomized study, a completely self-contained, single-chamber leadless cardiac pacemaker has shown to be safe and feasible. The absence of a transvenous lead and subcutaneous pulse generator could represent a paradigm shift in cardiac pacing.

Clinical trial registration url: http://clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT01700244.

Keywords: cardiac; pacemaker.

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