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Published in: Heart Failure Reviews 3/2011

Open Access 01-05-2011

When is an optimization not an optimization? Evaluation of clinical implications of information content (signal-to-noise ratio) in optimization of cardiac resynchronization therapy, and how to measure and maximize it

Authors: Punam A. Pabari, Keith Willson, Berthold Stegemann, Irene E. van Geldorp, Andreas Kyriacou, Michela Moraldo, Jamil Mayet, Alun D. Hughes, Darrel P. Francis

Published in: Heart Failure Reviews | Issue 3/2011

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Abstract

Impact of variability in the measured parameter is rarely considered in designing clinical protocols for optimization of atrioventricular (AV) or interventricular (VV) delay of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). In this article, we approach this question quantitatively using mathematical simulation in which the true optimum is known and examine practical implications using some real measurements. We calculated the performance of any optimization process that selects the pacing setting which maximizes an underlying signal, such as flow or pressure, in the presence of overlying random variability (noise). If signal and noise are of equal size, for a 5-choice optimization (60, 100, 140, 180, 220 ms), replicate AV delay optima are rarely identical but rather scattered with a standard deviation of 45 ms. This scatter was overwhelmingly determined (ρ = −0.975, P < 0.001) by Information Content, \( {\frac{\text{Signal}}{{{\text{Signal}} + {\text{Noise}}}}} \), an expression of signal-to-noise ratio. Averaging multiple replicates improves information content. In real clinical data, at resting, heart rate information content is often only 0.2–0.3; elevated pacing rates can raise information content above 0.5. Low information content (e.g. <0.5) causes gross overestimation of optimization-induced increment in VTI, high false-positive appearance of change in optimum between visits and very wide confidence intervals of individual patient optimum. AV and VV optimization by selecting the setting showing maximum cardiac function can only be accurate if information content is high. Simple steps to reduce noise such as averaging multiple replicates, or to increase signal such as increasing heart rate, can improve information content, and therefore viability, of any optimization process.
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Metadata
Title
When is an optimization not an optimization? Evaluation of clinical implications of information content (signal-to-noise ratio) in optimization of cardiac resynchronization therapy, and how to measure and maximize it
Authors
Punam A. Pabari
Keith Willson
Berthold Stegemann
Irene E. van Geldorp
Andreas Kyriacou
Michela Moraldo
Jamil Mayet
Alun D. Hughes
Darrel P. Francis
Publication date
01-05-2011
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Heart Failure Reviews / Issue 3/2011
Print ISSN: 1382-4147
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7322
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10741-010-9203-5

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