Background: The therapeutic options for hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) classically include medical treatment with beta-blockers and calcium antagonists or myectomy-myotomy as a surgical possibility for refractory cases. The observation that pacemaker activation of the heart in HOCM reduces the subaortic gradient is well known but less well investigated.
Methods: Eighty-three patients (33 female and 50 male) mean age 53 (18-82) years, with symptoms refractory to drug treatment and a resting gradient above 30 mmHg, who responded favourably to temporary pacing, were included in this prospective study and had a pacemaker (DDD) implanted. After an initial double-blind crossover phase of 6 months, patients were reinvestigated at 12 months and followed for a mean of 36 months.
Results: As observed during a screening investigation, the obstruction was significantly reduced from 72 +/- 35 mmHg to 29 +/- 24 mmHg (P < 0.01) when the pacemaker was on, while no major effect was seen during the sham phase. The effect was persistent at 1 year with a remaining resting gradient of 28 +/- 24 mmHg. In parallel, we documented an improvement in functional capacity, according to the NYHA classification and by quality of life analysis, and a significant improvement in dyspnoea and angina. Exercise on treadmill improved only in patients with reduced initial tolerance (< 8 min). During the mean follow-up of 36 months, 65 patients remained on pacing alone, with eight patients having additional AV-node ablation and five patients finally having surgery.
Conclusion: This controlled multicentre study shows that pacemaker treatment is an option for HOCM patients; it is inoffensive and does not exclude alternative methods, but satisfies 79% of patients beyond 3 years.