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ICD Effectiveness: Do Patients
Appreciate Their Limits? The Debate Continues
News Au=
thor:
Steve Stiles
CME Author: Désirée=
Lie,
MD, MSEd
Disclosures
From <=
span
style=3D'font-size:11.0pt;font-family:Arial;color:black'>
September 23, 2008 —=
; The benefits of implantable cardioverter-defibrillator=
(ICD)
therapy are overstated and their limitations are downplayed in clinical pra=
ctice,
considering limitations of the technology and of the clinical trials on whi=
ch
the ICD guidelines are based, according to a "state-of-the-art paper&q=
uot;
in the latest Journal of the American
College of Cardiology [1]. The article also questions whether I=
CD
candidates are told enough about the treatment's limitations to make an
informed decision about receiving a device.
"ICD therapy has cle=
arly
been shown to be effective in aborting sudden arrhythmic death. However, ... how much this capability, which modestly
prolongs life, outweighs potential adverse effects on morbidity, quality of
life, and the mode of death is less clear," write the authors, led by =
Dr Roderick Tung (
Appearing with the group's
report is a counterpoint from Dr =
Andrew
E Epstein (University of Alabama at Birmingham) [2], who
chaired the writing committee for the 2008 guidelines on "device-based
therapy of cardiac rhythm abnormalities" sponsored by the Heart Rhythm Society, American College of Cardiology=
, and
Until there are clinical
trial data to guide improvements in how patients are selected for ICD thera=
py and
in its effect on quality of life, "we are left with the results of
clinical trials that in the aggregate show improved survival in a broad
selection of patients with left ventricular dysfunction and either demonstr=
ated
or anticipated risk for arrhythmic death," he writes. "Although we
all freely admit that there are problems with ICDs, the weight of evidence
supports their use for the indications listed [in the 2008 guidelines] in
appropriate patients."
Both papers were published
online September 22, 2008 and are slated for the journal's September 30 iss=
ue.
The 2008 guidelines, rele=
ased
in May of this year, actually address some of the reservations Tung et al
express about ICDs and their use. They include, for example, that the previ=
ous
set of guidelines from 2006 held a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF=
) of
40% as the threshold at which devices are recommended despite scant clinical
trial support for their use when LVEFs exceed 35%. The more recent guidelin=
es,
in contrast, recommend device therapy specifically for patients who are
consistent with the entry criteria of the various trials.
"I think the benefit=
s of
ICDs are important, and there are many therapies that have equal or less
benefit that we give to patients,"
Dr William H Maisel (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center,
Boston, MA) said to heart<=
/strong>wire after reading the two arti=
cles.
"To me, the elephant=
in
the room is the large number of patients with strong indications for
primary-prevention ICDs who don't get them," he said. "I see pati=
ents
literally every week who have indications for
defibrillator therapy but don't get one, and then come into the hospital wi=
th
cardiac arrest."
"=
A work
in progress"
ICDs started out as a
secondary prevention therapy for patients clearly at increased risk for sud=
den
death, observed Tung (who acknowledged the review was written before releas=
e of
the 2008 guidelines). Their indications later broadened to encompass patien=
ts
of progressively lower risk, such that today the overwhelming majority of
primary-prevention recipients ultimately never need them, he observed for <=
strong>heartwire. But even for them, he said, the devices are oft=
en
oversold.
"They make the most
sense for someone who is a survivor of cardiac arrest, but even those patie=
nts
in the secondary prevention trials who received a defibrillator lived an
average of two to four months longer than those who didn't get a defibrilla=
tor.
And those are the patients for whom you'd think the devices would be a no-b=
rainer."
Even if two to four more months is statistically significant, he said, whet=
her
it's clinically meaningful is open to question.
His group's article isn't
saying ICDs don't provide a benefit, "we're just saying there are prob=
lems
with it, that we need to refine our selection of patients, and that they ar=
e a
work in progress," Tung said. "It's not about being
anti-defibrillator. It's about considering what the most appropriate
defibrillator use is. We're trying to acknowledge the fact that in the real=
world,
devices are fallible, that defibrillator implantation has up-front risks, a=
nd
that receiving shocks, whether appropriate or inappropriate, has a signific=
ant
impact on quality of life."
Other points made by the
group:
ICD cost-effectiveness
analyses routinely represent best-case scenarios that "exaggerate the
clinical benefit and underestimate the adverse effects, skewing the analyse=
s in
favor of defibrillators," according to Tung.
"With patients we of=
ten
refer to defibrillator therapy as a safety net, or like taking out an insur=
ance
policy," he said. "But insurance policies don't have the potential
for causing harm. Up to 80% of patients will never receive any benefit from=
the
defibrillator, yet they still have to incur all the risks. We're not saying
they're more harmful than good, but they need to know that there are some
potential risks."
To express ICD benefits in
terms of average increase in survival time is "misleading," Maisel
said. "Many patients who get a primary prevention defibrillator live
longer, and some patients might live considerably longer. To me it's less a=
bout
the average patient and more about emphasizing that one out of every six
patients might live two or three years longer. Some patients aren't going to
benefit, but some are going to benefit a lot."
"=
When
you're talking population medicine..."
Epstein told heartwire that he "couldn't agree more that our first
responsibility as physicians is to do the right thing for patients, and that
includes identifying those who have the greatest expectation for benefit and
trying to offer therapies that pose the least possible risk. So in that reg=
ard,
we have no disagreement whatsoever."
It's important to "g=
et
back to the bedside" and communicate with patients about both the poss=
ible
benefits and risks of ICD therapy, he said, noting that device therapy will=
be
recommended or not recommended on a case by case basis. "But when you'=
re
talking population medicine rather than individuals, you have to go by what=
the
clinical trials show."
In his counterpoint, Epst=
ein
addresses all or most of the concerns stated by Tung et al, often by citing=
the
2008 guidelines but sometimes by offering a different slant on the same
information:
Although ICDs malfunction,
have proarrhythmic effects, and negatively affect quality of life, Epstein's
article concedes, "they do not negate the r=
esults
of studies that in the aggregate show benefit."
Both the review from Tung=
et
al and his counterpoint conclude that "further work needs to be
done," Epstein said. "And that further work is to refine
identification of people who will benefit and who will not." But curre=
nt
guidelines, he added, have to go by the evidence we have now.
According to Maisel, the =
two
reports show that physicians are taking stock of ICDs and their value to
patients, "and while its not explicitly stated, I think it comes in the
wake the Medtronic Sprint Fidelis [ICD lead] recall and other device
recalls" over the last three years or so. Also, he observed, no major
trial that could potentially expand ICD use has been reported since Sudden
Cardiac Death Heart Failure Trial (SCD-HeFT).
"The devices had in =
many
ways been the poster child for modern medicine," Maisel said, "and
now the pendulum has swung in the other direction because of the device
performance issues. I think it's critical to get past that if the therapy is
going to save as many lives as it can."
Coauth=
or Dr.
Mark E Josephson (
Sources
The complete
contents of H=
eartwire, a professional news service of WebMD, can be found at
Clinical Context
In the past 15 years, the
annual insertion of ICDs has increased 15-fold. The recent 2008 practice
guidelines on device-based therapy for the implantation of ICDs and pacemak=
ers
are considered the current evidence in making recommendations, with the hel=
p of
independent experts. The guidelines include the identification of patients =
who
are most likely to benefit from ICD implantation.
This is a critical apprai=
sal
of evidence that led to the 2008 practice guideline recommendations with a =
rebuttal
from 1 author of the guidelines. The critical appraisal questions whether t=
he
benefits have been overrated, the risks underestimated, and whether
cost-effectiveness has been overestimated at the current cost of $30,000 per
device.
Study Highlights
Pearls for Practice