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Title: Electrophysiologic study-guided amiodarone for sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmias associated with structural heart diseases. Author: Aiba T, Yamagata K, Shimizu W, Taguchi A, Satomi K, Noda T, Okamura H, Suyama K, Aihara N, Kamakura S, Kurita T. Journal: Circ J; 2008 Jan; 72(1):88-93. PubMed ID: 18159106. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Although an electrophysiologic study (EPS) and Holter-monitoring are often helpful in evaluating the efficacy of antiarrhythmic drugs in patients with ventricular tachyarrhythmias (ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (VT/VF)), the efficacy of EPS- or Holter-guided oral amiodarone therapy in Japanese patients is still unclear. METHODS AND RESULTS: EPS was performed 1 month after starting amiodarone, and Holter-monitoring was recorded before and 1 month after amiodarone in 188 patients with sustained VT/VF because of structural heart diseases. In spite of the judgment of EPS (n=89) or Holter (n=75), all patients continued amiodarone. Patients were followed up to 3 years and the primary endpoint was VT/VF recurrence and secondary endpoint was death by all cause. Kaplan-Meier estimated the risk of VT/VF recurrence was significantly smaller with EPS-guided amiodarone (p<0.01) but not with Holter-guided amiodarone. Multivariate Cox hazard analysis revealed that EPS-guided amiodarone was an independent factor suppressing the recurrence of VT/VF (p<0.05, 95% confidence interval =0.15 to 0.96). In the subgroup analysis, EPS-guided amiodarone was effective in patients with relatively well-preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF > or =0.30) but not in patients with lower LVEF (LVEF <0.30). CONCLUSION: EPS-guided amiodarone was useful for preventing recurrence of VT/VF in patients with a relatively well-preserved LVEF, but not always beneficial in patients with a lower LVEF.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]