Defective recovery of QT dispersion predicts late cardiac mortality after percutaneous coronary intervention

Heart. 2011 Mar;97(6):466-72. doi: 10.1136/hrt.2010.206003. Epub 2011 Jan 26.

Abstract

Background: It has been suggested that corrected QT dispersion (cQTD) provides a measure of repolarisation inhomogeneity; however, the existence of a relationship between cQTD and cardiac outcomes is controversial.

Objective: To assess whether changes in cQTD following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) predict long-term survival.

Design: Prospective observational study.

Setting: Single tertiary care centre. Main outcome measures Cardiac mortality.

Patients: 612 patients had a 12-lead ECG recorded before and 6 h after PCI, and were followed-up for 49 ± 10 months.

Results: PCI was associated with a significant overall reduction of cQTD at 6 h versus baseline (p < 0.001); a reduction in cQTD occurred in 343 patients (56%). During the follow-up, 46 deaths (7.5%) were recorded, 21 of which for non-cardiac and 25 for cardiac causes. At Cox regression analysis, a reduced ΔcQTD (cQTD baseline - 6 h) was an independent predictor of cardiac mortality (HR = 1.497; 95% CI 1.081 to 2.075 for each 20 ms decrease; p = 0.015), together with age (HR = 1.672; 95% CI 1.039 to 2.691 per 10 years increase; p = 0.034), diabetes (HR = 2.622; 95% CI 1.112 to 6.184; p=0.028), peak CK-MB (HR = 1.798; 95% CI 1.063 to 3.039 per each unit increase over normal level; p = 0.029), three-vessel coronary artery disease (HR=3.626; 95% CI 1.079 to 12.187; p = 0.037) and the number of treated lesions (HR=2.066; 95% CI 1.208 to 3.532; p = 0.008). Patients in the lowest tertile of ΔcQTD and having a post-procedural increase of CK-MB had a considerably higher cardiac mortality than the remaining population (14.6 vs 2.4%, p < 0.001).

Conclusions: cQTD decreases after PCI. A defective cQTD recovery, suggesting the persistence of repolarisation inhomogeneities, predicts long-term cardiac mortality.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Angioplasty, Balloon, Coronary*
  • Coronary Disease / physiopathology
  • Coronary Disease / therapy*
  • Electrocardiography / methods
  • Epidemiologic Methods
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Prognosis
  • Treatment Outcome