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Factors associated with cardiac implantable electronic device‐related infections, New South Wales, 2016–21: a retrospective cohort study

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The known: Infections are serious complications of cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED) procedures that cause significant morbidity and mortality.

The new: Of 37 675 people who underwent CIED procedures in NSW during 2016–21, 397 (1.1%) were hospitalised with related infections within twelve months, and 500 (1.3%) by the end of follow‐up (median, 27 months). For people receiving CIED replacements or upgrades or new cardiac resynchronisation therapy with defibrillators, the respective proportions were 1.5% and 2.5%. A range of patient, device, and procedural factors were associated with greater risk of CIED‐related infection.

The implications: Awareness of specific risk factors for CIED‐related infections is needed for decisions about CIED procedures and prophylactic measures.

Cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED)‐related infections are serious procedure‐related complications that increase the risk of death,1,2 and their management often requires hospitalisation, and usually system removal.3,4 To prevent these infections, the American Heart Association recommends (class I) prophylactic intravenous antibiotic treatment (typically cefazolin) and meticulous attention to sterilisation.5 The number of CIED‐related infections is nevertheless rising as the number of people receiving CIEDs increases.6 A range of infection rates have been reported.2,6,7 Recent multicentre clinical trials8,9 have found overall 12‐month infection rates of about 1%, while large population‐based studies have reported rates between 0.7% and 4.3%.7 The device type, procedure type, and follow‐up time each influence the CIED‐related infection rate,6 and all need to be considered when comparing infection rates.

As CIED‐related infections are associated with poorer patient outcomes,1,2 identifying patient, device, and procedural factors that increase the risk of infection is crucial for developing clinical strategies that minimise the risk. Current understanding of risk factors is based primarily on studies in single centres or with interventional designs;8,9,10 only limited relevant population‐level data are available. Moreover, many studies have examined only new implant procedures, but the numbers of revision and replacement procedures are increasing.6,7

Information about CIED‐related infections in Australia is limited.11,12,13 The most recent analysis was of data for 2010–2015,11 and there have been no reports on factors associated with CIED‐related infections. We therefore quantified the rate of CIED‐related infections and investigated risk factors for such infections by examining hospital admissions data for New South Wales for the period 2016–21.

Methods

For our retrospective cohort study, we analysed person‐level linked hospital (Admitted Patient Data Collection, APDC) and mortality data for NSW residents, 1 January 2016 to 30 June 2021 (public hospitals) or 30 June 2020 (private hospitals; private hospital APDC data collection is often slower than for public hospitals). APDC records include demographic characteristics, diagnoses, and procedures for all public and private hospital admissions in NSW. Diagnoses are coded according to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases, tenth revision, Australian modification (ICD‐10‐AM), procedures according to the Australian Classification of Health Interventions (ACHI).14

We identified CIED procedures for adults (18 years or older) by ACHI codes in the primary and all secondary procedure fields in the APDC (Supporting Information, table 1). When several related procedures (eg, insertion of a generator followed by insertion of a lead) were undertaken during a hospital stay, only one was counted to avoid double counting. If multiple hospital stays for CIED procedures during the study period were identified for an individual, only the first CIED procedure was included. Admissions were excluded if admission and death dates were inconsistent, or only CIED removal or pocket procedures were undertaken.

CIED devices were classified as permanent pacemakers (PPMs), implantable cardioverter–defibrillators (ICDs), cardiac resynchronisation therapy with pacemaker (CRT‐P), or cardiac resynchronisation therapy with defibrillator (CRT‐D). CRT devices were identified by procedures involving left ventricular lead implantation. CIED procedures were classified as new, revision, or replacement (including upgrade) procedures.

The rate of CIED‐related infections was also estimated for people at high risk of such infections, as defined by the Worldwide Randomized Antibiotic Envelope Infection Prevention Trial (WRAP‐IT):9 people who underwent CIED replacement or system upgrade with or without new leads, or a new CRT‐D procedure.

Study outcome

The primary outcome was hospitalisation with a CIED‐related infection after the CIED procedure. An ICD‐10‐AM code specific for CIED‐related infection (T82.71), introduced on 1 July 2017, in any diagnosis field identified infections from this date onwards. CIED infections prior to 1 July 2017 were identified by a more general code for cardiac device‐related infections (T82.7) and either a CIED removal procedure or the status code for the presence or management of a CIED (Z95.0; Z45.0) in the procedure or diagnosis fields for an episode of care. This definition yielded annual numbers of infections prior to July 2017 broadly consistent with those for infections from July 2017.

Statistical analysis

We followed patients from their CIED procedure date until the earliest of three endpoints: first hospital admission with a CIED‐related infection, death, or end of follow‐up (30 June 2020 for private hospitals, 30 June 2021 for public hospitals). We depict the cumulative incidence of CIED‐related infections in Kaplan–Meier plots. We report incidence rates per 1000 person‐months by device type and procedure type, and for specific follow‐up periods after the CIED procedure. To maintain patient anonymity, we do not report infection numbers lower than five in tables.

We summarise data for continuous variables as means with standard deviations (SDs), for categorical variables as counts and proportions. The statistical significance of differences in the characteristics of people with or without CIED‐related infections were assessed in 2‐sample Student t or Mann–Whitney tests (continuous variables) or χ2 tests (categorical variables).

We investigated associations with CIED‐related infections of the following factors — selected according to data from the PADIT (Prevention of Arrhythmia Device Infection Trial)15 and in consultation with clinicians — in Cox proportional hazards regression models: age, sex, private insurance status, emergency admission, CIED device type, CIED procedure type, number of prior CIED procedures, previous CIED infection, other medical conditions, concomitant cardiac surgery, prior coronary artery bypass or valve surgery, and hospital type. Medical conditions — diabetes, hypertension, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, atrial fibrillation, cardiomyopathy, peripheral vascular disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), sleep apnoea, chronic kidney disease, and obesity — were identified by ICD‐10‐AM codes in diagnosis fields for the CIED procedure hospitalisation or another hospitalisation in the twelve months preceding the CIED procedure (Supporting Information, tables 2 and 3). The number of previous CIED procedures was determined from hospital records for admissions between 1 July 2001 and the admission included in our analysis. We initially evaluated associations between variables and CIED‐related infection in unadjusted analyses and minimally adjusted analyses (adjusted for age, sex, other medical condition). To determine which factors were most strongly associated with CIED‐related infections (noting correlations between variables such as number of prior procedures, procedure type, and prior CIED infection), we included all covariates for which P P > 0.05 using the Hosmer–Lemeshow stepwise backward elimination approach.16 We report adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). The proportional hazards assumption was assessed by checking the scaled Schoenfeld residuals; collinearity was assessed with the variance inflation factor. All analyses were conducted in Stata 16.0.

Ethics approval

This study was approved by the human research ethics committees of the University of New South Wales (RG171323), NSW Population and Health Services Research (HREC/18/CIPHS/56), the Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of NSW (1503/19), and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (EO2018/2/431).

Results

Of 60 428 CIED procedures in NSW during 2016–21 (public hospitals) or 2016–20 (private hospitals), 37 675 were included in our analysis (23 194 men, 63.5%) (Supporting Information, figure 1). A total of 500 CIED‐related infections were identified; the median follow‐up time was 24.9 months (interquartile range, 11.2–40.8 months) (Supporting Information, figure 2). Compared with people who did not have CIED‐related infections, the mean age of those who did was slightly higher (75.8 [SD, 12.8] v. 72.2 [SD, 15.2] years), and larger proportions had devices with CRT capabilities (15.2% v. 8.2%), had undergone replacement or revision procedures (34.4% v 26.5%) or concomitant cardiac procedures (5.6% v 3.4%), had previously undergone valve surgery (4.6% v 2.4%), or had a variety of other medical conditions. The proportions of people who had previously undergone CIED procedures (30.0% v 18.7%) or had CIED‐related infections (12.2% v 0.8%) were also larger for people who had infections following the index procedure (Box 1).

Incidence of CIED‐related infection

Within twelve months of their index CIED procedures, 397 people had experienced CIED‐related infections (Kaplan–Meier rate, 1.1%), and 500 by the end of follow‐up (Kaplan–Meier rate, 1.3%) (Box 2); 148 of 10 540 people at high risk of CIED‐related infections had experienced CIED‐related infections within twelve months (Kaplan–Meier rate, 1.5%) and 186 by the end of follow‐up (Kaplan–Meier rate, 2.5%) (Supporting Information, figure 3). By device type, the incidence rate was highest following CRT‐D device procedures (45 of 1482 people, Kaplan–Meier rate, 3.4%) and lowest after PPM procedures (302 of 27 416, Kaplan–Meier rate, 1.3%); by procedure type, it was highest following revision procedures (157 of 9419, Kaplan–Meier rate, 3.2%) and lowest following new insertions (328 of 27 325; Kaplan–Meier rate, 1.2%) (Box 2).

The overall infection rate was 0.50 (95% CI, 0.45–0.54) per 1000 person‐months; it was highest during the first month after the procedure (5.60 [95% CI, 4.89–6.42] per 1000 person‐months). Across the entire follow‐up period, the incidence rate was highest for people with CRT‐Ds (1.08 [95% CI, 0.81–1.44] per 1000 person‐months) and lowest for those with PPMs (0.42 [95% CI, 0.38–0.47] per 1000 person‐months) (Box 3).

Factors associated with CIED‐related infections

Two variables significantly associated with CIED‐related infections in the minimally adjusted model (Supporting Information, table 5) were eliminated from the final Cox proportional hazards regression model: procedure type (highly correlated with number of prior procedures) and congestive heart failure. In the final model, the risk of CIED‐related infection was greater for people under 65 years of age than for those aged 65–74 years (aHR, 1.71; 95% CI, 1.32–2.23), for people with CRT‐D devices than for those with PPMs (aHR, 1.46; 95% CI, 1.02–2.08), for people who had previously undergone CIED procedures (two or more v no prior procedures: aHR, 1.51; 95% CI, 1.02–2.25) or had CIED‐related infections (aHR, 11.4; 95% CI, 8.34–15.7), for people who had undergone concomitant cardiac surgery (aHR, 1.62; 95% CI, 1.10–2.39), and for people with atrial fibrillation (aHR, 1.33; 95% CI, 1.11–1.60), chronic kidney disease (aHR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.27–1.87), COPD (aHR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.10–1.69), or cardiomyopathy (aHR 1.60; 95% CI, 1.25–2.05). The association with obesity was not statistically significant in the final model (aHR, 1.24; 95% CI, 0.9997–1.53) (Box 4).

Discussion

Our analysis of NSW hospital admissions data indicated that 1.1% of people who had CIED procedures during 2016–21 had CIED‐related infections within twelve months, and 1.3% by the end of follow‐up (median, 26 months). Among people at high risk of CIED‐related infections, as defined by the WRAP‐IT criteria, 1.5% experienced infection within twelve months of the procedure, and 2.5% by the end of follow‐up (median, 24.9 months). The overall infection rate was low (500 CIED‐related infections; 0.50 [95% CI, 0.45–0.54] per 1000 person‐months), but the risk of CIED‐related infection was greater for people under 65 years of age than for those aged 65–74 years, for people with CRT‐D devices than for those with PPMs, for people who had previously undergone CIED procedures or had CIED‐related infections, for those who had undergone concomitant cardiac surgery, and for people with atrial fibrillation, chronic kidney disease, COPD, or cardiomyopathy.

In a 2015 systematic review, the overall CIED infection rate in individual studies ranged between 0.7% and 4.3%.7 Population‐based studies similar to ours in Denmark17 and France18 respectively reported infection rates of 0.8% (six months) and 1.6% (36 months). However, factors such as device type and procedure type significantly influence the infection rate. For instance, 80% of devices in our study were PPMs and 74% of procedures were for new implants; in the Danish study, 71% of devices were PPMs and 74% new implants,17 while in the French study 84% of devices were PPMs and all procedures were for new implants.18 Two recently published large clinical trials, PADIT8 and WRAP‐IT,9 respectively found 12‐month CIED infection rates of 1.03% and 1.2%. Among people at high risk of CIED‐related infections (ie, excluding patients undergoing PPM procedures or first procedures other than for CRT‐D), the infection rate in our study was 1.5% over twelve months. The strict inclusion and exclusion criteria of the two large trials,8,9 and the fact that infection was the primary endpoint (potential Hawthorne effect: clinicians may have been more careful with infection control), may have influenced their infection rates.1

Other studies have also found that the risk of CIED‐related infections was lower in older people.6,19 The risk of infection declined with age in the PADIT trial;15 in a prospective study that included 46 000 Danish patients with pacemakers, the risk was much lower for people aged 80–89 years than for those aged 20–49 years (aHR, 0.29; 95% CI, 0.21–0.39).20 Although the biological reason for this difference is uncertain, it is clear that younger people with CIEDs are more likely to undergo multiple device procedures.15 We also found that having already had a CIED procedure or CIED‐related infection was associated with greater risk of infection after the index procedure. Further patient factors associated with infection in our study were chronic kidney disease, atrial fibrillation, COPD, and cardiomyopathy, consistent with systematic review findings of greater risk for patients with diabetes, chronic renal disease, COPD, atrial fibrillation, immunosuppression, or heart disease.6,7

In our fully adjusted model, the only major difference by device type was the greater risk of infection for people undergoing CRT‐D rather than PPM procedures, consistent with the findings of a meta‐analysis.7 However, the PADIT trial found that ICD, CRT‐P, and CRT‐D procedures were each associated with greater risks of infection than PPM procedures.15 CRT devices are larger than other CIEDs and require three leads and a longer procedure time,21 each of which could increase the risk of infection. In our minimally adjusted model, the risk was greater following CRT‐P than after PPM procedures. Similarly, the risk of infection was greater for revision and replacement procedures than for new insertions in our minimally adjusted model, but not in the fully adjusted model, presumably reflecting the collinearity of procedure type and prior procedure status; as it is therefore impossible to distinguish their effects, both procedure type and number of previous CIED procedures should be considered risk factors for CIED‐related infection.

Limitations

We relied on the accuracy of diagnosis and procedure codes in data collected for administrative purposes; we may have missed some CIED‐related infections, particularly prior to July 2017. However, the accuracy of administrative coding in Australia is high when compared with data in clinical registries: 85% agreement for the principal diagnosis and 80% for the principal procedure code.22 A sensitivity analysis of data from 1 July 2017 onwards yielded similar results to our main analysis (data not shown). The diagnostic codes used to identify CIED‐related infections could include conditions ranging from localised pocket infections to endocarditis, bacteraemia, and septic shock. We did not have information on peri‐operative management of CIED‐related infections, such as antibiotic use. The impact of some patient‐level covariates included in the PADIT score,15 such as immunosuppression and long term or recent high‐dose steroid use, could not be assessed. We identified medical conditions recorded during the index admission as well as during hospital admissions in the preceding twelve months. This approach may have missed or misclassified some conditions, which would have weakened the reported associations with CIED‐related infection. Finally, residual confounding by unmeasured factors is possible because of the observational study design.

Conclusions

The overall CIED‐related infection rate was low, but was higher for people defined by recent clinical trials as being at greater risk of such infection. We identified several patient, device, and procedural factors associated with greater risk of CIED‐related infection. Knowledge of these factors can help clinicians discuss infection risk with individual patients, identify those at particular risk of infection, and inform decisions about device type, upgrades and replacements, and prophylactic interventions. Despite uncertainty regarding the effectiveness of peri‐procedural antibiotic prophylaxis,2,8 evidence from the WRAP‐IT trial suggests that an absorbable, antibiotic‐eluting envelope can prevent CIED‐related infection, and their use has recently been recommended by the European Heart Rhythm Association.9

 

Box 1 – Characteristics of people who underwent cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED) procedures in New South Wales, 2016–21 (public hospitals) or 2016–20 (private hospitals), by CIED infection status*

Characteristic

No CIED‐related infection

CIED‐related infection

P


Number of patients

37 175 (98.7%)

500 (1.3%)

 

Age (years), mean (standard deviation)

75.8 (12.8)

72.2 (15.2)

Sex (female)

13 589 (36.6%)

172 (34.4%)

0.32

Device type

 

 

 Permanent pacemaker

27 114 (72.9%)

302 (60.4%)

 

 Implantable cardioverter–defibrillator

7010 (18.9%)

122 (24.4%)

 

 Cardiac resynchronisation therapy with pacemaker

1614 (4.3%)

31 (6.2%)

 

 Cardiac resynchronisation therapy with defibrillator

1437 (3.9%)

45 (9.0%)

 

Procedure type

 

 

 New

27 325 (73.5%)

328 (65.6%)

 

 Revision

588 (1.6%)

15 (3.0%)

 

 Replacement (including upgrades)

9262 (24.9%)

157 (31.4%)

 

Prior CIED procedures

 

 

 None

30 215 (81.3%)

350 (70.0%)

 

 One

6058 (16.3%)

114 (22.8%)

 

 Two or more

902 (2.4%)

36 (7.2%)

 

Previous CIED‐related infections

286 (0.8%)

61 (12.2%)

Emergency admission

11 488 (30.9%)

153 (30.6%)

0.88

Concomitant cardiac procedure

1258 (3.4%)

28 (5.6%)

0.007

Private insurance

20 539 (55.2%)

261 (52.2%)

0.17

Length of stay (days), median (interquartile range)

2 (1–6)

3 (1–11)

Medical history

 

 

 

 Diabetes

11201 (30.1%)

168 (33.6%)

0.09

 Hypertension

28 777 (77.4%)

393 (78.6%)

0.53

 Coronary artery disease

20 089 (54.0%)

311 (62.2%)

 Congestive heart failure

14 551 (39.1%)

288 (57.6%)

 Atrial fibrillation

14 729 (39.6%)

245 (49.0%)

 Cardiomyopathy

3722 (10.0%)

107 (21.4%)

 Peripheral vascular disease

9165 (24.7%)

182 (36.4%)

 Stroke

3499 (9.4%)

61 (12.2%)

0.034

 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

6087 (16.4%)

117 (23.4%)

 Sleep apnoea

1355 (3.6%)

36 (7.2%)

 Chronic kidney disease

8995 (24.2%)

185 (37.0%)

 Obesity

6267 (16.9%)

129 (25.8%)

Cardiac surgery history

 

 

 

 Coronary artery bypass graft

609 (1.6%)

12 (2.4%)

0.18

 Valve surgery

900 (2.4%)

23 (4.6%)

0.002

Hospital type

 

 

0.27

 Public

20 862 (56.1%)

293 (58.6%)

 

 Private

16 313 (43.9%)

207 (41.4%)

 


* The characteristics of patients at high risk of CIED‐related infections are included in the Supporting Information, table 4. † From 1 July 2001 to the index CIED procedure. ‡ As recorded in hospital records for index admission and all hospital admissions in the twelve months preceding the index admission.

Box 3 – Incidence of cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED)‐related infections, by time since CIED procedure, overall and by device type

Device type/follow‐up time

Person‐months

Infections

Incidence rate per 1000 person‐months (95% CI)


All procedure types (37 675 people)

 

 

 

 0–1 month

37 137

208

5.60 (4.89–6.42)

 2–3 months

71 456

98

1.37 (1.13–1.67)

 4–12 months

280 924

91

0.32 (0.26–0.40)

 13 or more months

617 211

103

0.17 (0.14–0.20)

 End of follow‐up

1 006 728

500

0.50 (0.45–0.54)

Permanent pacemaker (27 416 people)

 

 

 

 0–1 month

27 032

125

4.62 (3.88–5.51)

 2–3 months

51 981

56

1.08 (0.83–1.40)

 4–12 months

203 118

55

0.27 (0.21–0.35)

 13 or more months

436 058

66

0.15 (0.12–0.19)

 End of follow‐up

718 189

302

0.42 (0.38–0.47)

Implantable cardioverter–defibrillator (7132 people)

 

 

 

 0–1 month

7036

49

6.96 (5.26–9.21)

 2–3 months

13 586

26

1.91 (1.30–2.81)

 4–12 months

54 215

25

0.46 (0.31–0.68)

 13 or more months

125 827

22

0.17 (0.12–0.27)

 End of follow‐up

200 664

122

0.61 (0.51–0.73)

Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (pacemaker) (1645 people)

 

 

 

 0–1 month

1617

15

9.28 (5.59–15.4)

 2–3 months

3091

NA

 4–12 months

12 421

NA

 13 or more months

29 058

8

0.28 (0.14–0.55)

 End of follow‐up

46 187

31

0.67 (0.47–0.95)

Cardiac resynchronisation therapy (defibrillator) (1482 people)

 

 

 

 0–1 month

1452

19

13.1 (8.35–20.5)

 2–3 months

2798

12

4.29 (2.44–7.55)

 4–12 months

11 171

7

0.63 (0.30–1.31)

 13 or more months

26 267

7

0.27 (0.13–0.56)

 End of follow‐up

41 688

45

1.08 (0.81–1.44)


CI = confidence interval; NA = not available (suppressed raw count numbers).

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