EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - (Page 28) 28 EP STEINBERG Continued from page 27 RESEARCH APRIL 2008 of defibrillator patients, and found a very strong negative impact when patients received a shock; if the patients received multiple shocks, there was an even stronger negative effect as well as a decline in their sense of wellbeing. This is of interest — the psychological relationship to defibrillator patients is one that we have further explored here. In the AVID trial, we found that although there were no differences in QoL between the randomized arms, we confirmed that a painful ICD shock was what led defibrillator patients to a decline in their sense of well-being (an adverse effect to medication was the same in the other arm). However, what had never been explored was the longterm prognosis of patients relative to psychosocial profiles.What we do know from other clinical contexts is that patients’ psychological characteristics can strongly correlate with how they do over time; for example, depression or a sense of satisfaction and well-being are all in many ways predictive of how patients do in various cardiac conditions. But what we did not know is how those characteristics reflect patients’ long-term outcomes when they’ve already had a life-threatening arrhythmia requiring a defibrillator. Vital exhaustion was a term coined by other researchers, specifically when they put together a set of psychosocial characteristics and then studied them long term. It was not specifically studied in a QoL or separate instrument, but we went back and looked at it by pulling out questions in our questionnaires that could mimic the sense of vitality that other people had studied previously.The vital exhaustion characteristics were defined as a sense of demoralization or loss of energy — in other words, patients who were giving up or were so beaten down by their medical conditions that they didn’t feel the same positive outlook towards the future, and that tends not to correlate well with outcome. satisfaction with regards to their psychosocial health, family life, and socioeconomical status. Were QoL measurements predictive of the fatal events/ outcomes? Yes, and very powerfully statistically significant, they imparted an increased risk to patients’ likelihood of dying. So roundly speaking, patients who had a self-perceived lesser quality of life did much worse than patients who were in either the moderate or better categories. In addition, over time, the difference tended to become accentuated. For example, at the end of three years, the worst third of the patients had a 40 percent death rate, whereas the best third of the patients had about a 15 percent death rate. This is quite a remarkable difference. completely different from all other preceding months, and completely different from the same month a year before. We published this a few years ago, but again, it strikingly demonstrates the strong relationship between psychological distress and cardiovascular function, and shows that dangerous cardiovascular events can result from psychological stress. Do you think there needs to be more therapeutic strategies for ICD patients? What is the current protocol, if any, for measuring psychological or psychosocial stress in ICD patients? Unfortunately, there is probably no standard of care currently in place. I think it varies a lot, and patients do have to rely a great deal on what their individual doctor decides to do. I think in general, and in particular for defibrillator patients, we need to be mindful that emotional and psychological problems can lead to both a deterioration in cardiovascular stability and in long-term outcomes, so we need to be looking out for it and react appropriately if it’s detected. I think that there are some patients who do benefit from counseling, although others may require more intensive psychological care. In general it’s a good idea to support the emotional needs of defibrillator patients, and one of the things that is done by our group is hosting patient support groups. This way, patients with defibrillators can get together and we can speak with them as a group. We also need to just keep doing more research to understand how to best to treat patients in a standard way, and for that, we’ll need larger clinical trials. How many patients participated in the QoL tests? In addition, what QoL instruments were used? In the study that we presented in HeartRhythm, there were 740 patients who completed the QoL forms at baseline; that was about three-quarters of all the participants in AVID. Some patients, because of timing or severity of illness or unwillingness to provide consent, did not complete the QoL questionnaires. However, the group overall was representative of the AVID study population as a whole. The QoL instruments were variable; there were three main ones: 1) SF-36, which is a very common medical questionnaire; 2) the Patient Concerns Checklist, which gives patients a chance to describe their perception of how their body is functioning; and 3) the Quality of Life Index, which gives the patient a chance to express their sense of Will you be doing further research on this topic? Yes, we have done some more. Some of our most interesting research was done after 9/11. We hypothesized that 9/11 had been such a powerful emotional event, particularly since our patients draw from the NY metropolitan area, that we were concerned that there was going to be an increase in potentially life-threatening arrhythmias that may occur in the aftermath of 9/11.We studied our defibrillator patients who came to our various clinics — and we’re located all over the NY metropolitan area, both very close to the World Trade Center site and also in the more suburban locations. We compared patients’ event rates in the months after 9/11 to the months before 9/11. Since defibrillators record whenever life-threatening arrhythmias happen and specifically can record the time and date when it happens, it becomes a very accurate way to chronologically assemble timelines of arrhythmic events and compare them to various periods. To make a long story short, we found that for a whole month after 9/11, there was a marked increase in the number of life-threatening arrhythmias that occurred in our defibrillator patients, regardless of how close they were to the World Trade Center on 9/11 and how close they lived in the community. Not only that, but it stayed up for a whole month, and then went back down to baseline levels. Now baseline levels are remarkably constant from month to month, so this really stood out. If you look at the month-to-month event rate, that one month sticks out like a sore thumb — it’s completely different than all other subsequent months, I thought the term “vital exhaustion” was very interesting. Can you tell us a little about it and why it is important that this be recognized in patients? What we do know from other clinical contexts is that patients’ psychological characteristics can strongly correlate with how they do over time But what we did not know is how those characteristics reflect patients’ long-term outcomes when they’ve already had a life-threatening arrhythmia requiring a defibrillator. For more information, please see: HeartRhythm 2008;5:361–365. or www.HRSonline.org Visit EP Lab Digest at Heart Rhythm 2008! Heart Rhythm 2008 will be taking place May 14-17 in San Francisco, California. Will you be attending? If so, we hope to see you there! Please stop by and see us at booth #519! http://www.HRSonline.org
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of EP Lab Digest - April 2008 EP Lab Digest - April 2008 Pediatric Electrophysiology Medical Relief Work on the Yucatan Peninsula: A Labor of Love EP 101: Considerations for the Elderly EP Patient Contents Letter from the Editor Spotlight Interview: University of Maryland A Summary of the ACC/AHA/Physician Consortium 2008 Clinical Performance Measures for Adults with Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter Can Psychosocial Characteristics Predict Fatal Outcomes in Patients? Interview with Jonathan S. Steinberg, MD, FACC 10-Minute Interview: Diane D. Sheffield, RN, BSN AED Access for All: An Organization for SCA Survivors New Column: 5 Quick Clues to AV Nodal Reentry Tachycardia CMS 2008 OPPS Final Rule Review New Online AED and CPR Training Opportunities: Q & A with Keith Weaver Highlights from the 5th Annual International Arrhythmia Winter School Email Discussion Group Events Calendar Second Annual Salary Survey Industry News and Products Classifieds Advertisers Index EP Lab Digest - April 2008 EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - EP 101: Considerations for the Elderly EP Patient (Page 1) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - EP 101: Considerations for the Elderly EP Patient (Page 2) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - EP 101: Considerations for the Elderly EP Patient (Page BRC1) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - EP 101: Considerations for the Elderly EP Patient (Page BRC2) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Contents (Page 3) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 4) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 5) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 6) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 7) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 8) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 9) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 10) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 11) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 12) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 13) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 14) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 15) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 16) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Letter from the Editor (Page 17) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Spotlight Interview: University of Maryland (Page 18) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Spotlight Interview: University of Maryland (Page 19) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Spotlight Interview: University of Maryland (Page 20) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Spotlight Interview: University of Maryland (Page 21) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Spotlight Interview: University of Maryland (Page 22) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Spotlight Interview: University of Maryland (Page 23) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - A Summary of the ACC/AHA/Physician Consortium 2008 Clinical Performance Measures for Adults with Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter (Page 24) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - A Summary of the ACC/AHA/Physician Consortium 2008 Clinical Performance Measures for Adults with Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter (Page BRC3) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - A Summary of the ACC/AHA/Physician Consortium 2008 Clinical Performance Measures for Adults with Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter (Page BRC4) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - A Summary of the ACC/AHA/Physician Consortium 2008 Clinical Performance Measures for Adults with Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter (Page 25) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - A Summary of the ACC/AHA/Physician Consortium 2008 Clinical Performance Measures for Adults with Nonvalvular Atrial Fibrillation or Flutter (Page 26) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Can Psychosocial Characteristics Predict Fatal Outcomes in Patients? Interview with Jonathan S. Steinberg, MD, FACC (Page 27) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Can Psychosocial Characteristics Predict Fatal Outcomes in Patients? Interview with Jonathan S. Steinberg, MD, FACC (Page 28) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Can Psychosocial Characteristics Predict Fatal Outcomes in Patients? Interview with Jonathan S. Steinberg, MD, FACC (Page 29) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - 10-Minute Interview: Diane D. Sheffield, RN, BSN (Page 30) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - 10-Minute Interview: Diane D. Sheffield, RN, BSN (Page 31) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - 10-Minute Interview: Diane D. Sheffield, RN, BSN (Page 32) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - 10-Minute Interview: Diane D. Sheffield, RN, BSN (Page 33) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - AED Access for All: An Organization for SCA Survivors (Page 34) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - AED Access for All: An Organization for SCA Survivors (Page 35) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - AED Access for All: An Organization for SCA Survivors (Page 36) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - AED Access for All: An Organization for SCA Survivors (Page 37) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - New Column: 5 Quick Clues to AV Nodal Reentry Tachycardia (Page 38) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - New Column: 5 Quick Clues to AV Nodal Reentry Tachycardia (Page 39) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - CMS 2008 OPPS Final Rule Review (Page 40) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - CMS 2008 OPPS Final Rule Review (Page 41) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - New Online AED and CPR Training Opportunities: Q & A with Keith Weaver (Page 42) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - New Online AED and CPR Training Opportunities: Q & A with Keith Weaver (Page 43) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Highlights from the 5th Annual International Arrhythmia Winter School (Page 44) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Highlights from the 5th Annual International Arrhythmia Winter School (Page 45) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Highlights from the 5th Annual International Arrhythmia Winter School (Page 46) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Email Discussion Group (Page 47) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Email Discussion Group (Page 48) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Email Discussion Group (Page 49) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 50) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 51) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 52) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Events Calendar (Page 53) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Second Annual Salary Survey (Page 54) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Second Annual Salary Survey (Page 55) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Second Annual Salary Survey (Page 56) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 57) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 58) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 59) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Industry News and Products (Page 60) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Classifieds (Page 61) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 62) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 63) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 64) EP Lab Digest - April 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page BRC5)
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