• Heart Rhythm · Jul 2004

    Patient, procedural, and hardware factors associated with pacemaker lead failures in pediatrics and congenital heart disease.

    • Elizabeth B Fortescue, Charles I Berul, Frank Cecchin, Edward P Walsh, John K Triedman, and Mark E Alexander.
    • Arrhythmia Service, Department of Cardiology, Children's Hospital Boston and Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
    • Heart Rhythm. 2004 Jul 1; 1 (2): 150-9.

    ObjectivesTo examine outcomes of children with pacemakers over a 22-year period and identify risk factors for lead failure.BackgroundSmall patient size, structural cardiac abnormalities, and growth may complicate pediatric pacemaker management. Better knowledge of risk factors for lead failure in these patients may help improve future outcomes.MethodsAll pacemaker patients followed at one pediatric center 1980-2002 were included. Lead failures were identified retrospectively as leads repaired, replaced, or abandoned due to fracture, insulation break, dislodgement, or abnormalities in pacing or sensing. Risk factors were identified using logistic regression and Cox analyses.ResultsA total of 1007 leads were implanted in 497 patients during the study period (5175 lead-years). Median age at implant was 9 years (0-55); 64% of patients had structural congenital heart disease. Median follow-up time was 6.2 years (0-22). Lead failure occurred in 155 leads (15%), and 115 patients (23%), with 28% of patients experiencing multiple failures. Significant independent correlates of lead failure included age <12 years at implant, history of structural congenital heart defects, and epicardial lead placement. Younger patients (<12 years) experienced significantly more lead fractures than older children (P = .005), while patients with congenital heart defects experienced more exit block. Epicardial leads were more likely to fail due to fracture or exit block, while transvenous leads failed more due to insulation breaks or dislodgements.ConclusionsPediatric pacing patients have a high incidence lead failures. These occur most commonly in younger patients, structural congenital heart disease, and those with epicardial lead systems. Approaches to pacing system implantation and follow-up in these patients need to be individualized, with special attention to minimizing risk of lead failures. Our findings suggest that expanded utilization of transvenous systems in smaller patients seems justified when anatomy permits.

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