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Electrocardiographic and electrophysiological predictors of atrioventricular block after transcatheter aortic valve replacement.

BACKGROUND: Electrophysiological predictors of atrioventricular (AV) block after transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) are unknown.

OBJECTIVE: We sought to assess the value of electrophysiology study before and after TAVR.

METHODS: Seventy-five consecutive pacemaker-free patients undergoing TAVR at the Montreal Heart Institute were prospectively studied.

RESULTS: Eleven patients (14.7%) developed AV block during the index hospitalization and 3 (4.0%) after hospital discharge over a median follow-up of 1.4 years (interquartile range 0.6-2.1 years). AV block developed in 5 of 6 patients with preprocedural right bundle branch block (83.3%), 8 of 30 patients with new-onset left bundle branch block (LBBB; 26.7%), and 1 of 7 patients with preexisting LBBB (14.3%). In multivariate analysis that considered all patients, the delta-HV interval (HV interval after TAVR minus HV interval before TAVR) was the only factor independently associated with AV block. In the subgroup of patients with new-onset LBBB, the postprocedural HV interval was strongly associated with AV block. By receiver operating characteristic analysis, a delta-HV interval of ≥13 ms predicted AV block with 100.0% sensitivity and 84.4% specificity and an HV interval of ≥65 ms predicted AV block with 83.3% sensitivity and 81.6% specificity. In multivariate analysis, the HV interval after TAVR (hazard ratio 1.073 per ms; 95% confidence interval 1.029-1.119; P = .001) was also independently associated with all-cause mortality.

CONCLUSION: A prolonged delta-HV interval (≥13 ms) is strongly associated with AV block after TAVR. In patients with new-onset LBBB after TAVR, a postprocedural HV interval of ≥65 ms is likewise predictive of AV block.

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