Author: Adabag, Selçuk; Zimmerman, Patrick; Black, Adam; Madjid, Mohammad; Safaviâ€Naeini, Payam; Cheng, Alan
Title: Implantable Cardioverterâ€Defibrillator Shocks During COVIDâ€19 Outbreak Cord-id: jwc43pfg Document date: 2021_5_28
ID: jwc43pfg
Snippet: BACKGROUND: COVIDâ€19 was temporally associated with an increase in outâ€ofâ€hospital cardiac arrests, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. We sought to determine if patients with implantable defibrillators residing in areas with high COVIDâ€19 activity experienced an increase in defibrillator shocks during the COVIDâ€19 outbreak. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using the Medtronic (Mounds View, MN) Carelink database from 2019 and 2020, we retrospectively determined the incidence of implantable
Document: BACKGROUND: COVIDâ€19 was temporally associated with an increase in outâ€ofâ€hospital cardiac arrests, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. We sought to determine if patients with implantable defibrillators residing in areas with high COVIDâ€19 activity experienced an increase in defibrillator shocks during the COVIDâ€19 outbreak. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using the Medtronic (Mounds View, MN) Carelink database from 2019 and 2020, we retrospectively determined the incidence of implantable defibrillator shock episodes among patients residing in New York City, New Orleans, LA, and Boston, MA. A total of 14 665 patients with a Medtronic implantable defibrillator (age, 66±13 years; and 72% men) were included in the analysis. Comparing analysis time periods coinciding with the COVIDâ€19 outbreak in 2020 with the same periods in 2019, we observed a larger mean rate of defibrillator shock episodes per 1000 patients in New York City (17.8 versus 11.7, respectively), New Orleans (26.4 versus 13.5, respectively), and Boston (30.9 versus 20.6, respectively) during the COVIDâ€19 surge. Age†and sexâ€adjusted hurdle model showed that the Poisson distribution rate of defibrillator shocks for patients with ≥1 shock was 3.11 times larger (95% CI, 1.08–8.99; P=0.036) in New York City, 3.74 times larger (95% CI, 0.88–15.89; P=0.074) in New Orleans, and 1.97 times larger (95% CI, 0.69–5.61; P=0.202) in Boston in 2020 versus 2019. However, the binomial odds of any given patient having a shock episode was not different in 2020 versus 2019. CONCLUSIONS: Defibrillator shock episodes increased during the higher COVIDâ€19 activity in New York City, New Orleans, and Boston. These observations may provide insights into COVIDâ€19–related increase in cardiac arrests.
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