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Clinical implication of electrocardiogram change in patients experiencing lung transplantation with end stage lung disease

  • Ah Young Leem
  • , Hee Tae Yu
  • , Min Dong Sung
  • , Kyung Soo Chung
  • , Yeonkyeong Kim
  • , Ala Woo
  • , Song Yee Kim
  • , Moo Suk Park
  • , Young Sam Kim
  • , Young Ho Yang
  • , Ha Eun Kim
  • , Jin Gu Lee
  • , Kyuseok Kim
  • , Kyu Bom Kim
  • , Boyoung Joung
  • , Junbeom Park
  • , Su Hwan Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Introduction: End-stage lung disease causes cardiac remodeling and induces electrocardiogram (ECG) changes. On the other way, whether lung transplantation (LTx) in end-stage lung disease patients are associated with ECG change is unknown. The object of this study was to investigate ECG changes before and after LTx in end-stage lung disease patients and whether these changes had clinical significance. Method: This was a single-center retrospective cohort study of 280 end-stage lung disease patients who consecutively underwent LTx at a tertiary referral hospital. ECG findings before LTx and within 1 week and 1, 3, and 6 months after LTx were obtained and analyzed. To find clinical meaning, the ECG at 1 month after LTx was analyzed according to 1-year survival (survivor vs non-survivor groups). Survival data were estimated using the Kaplan–Meier method. Results: Significant differences were observed in the PR interval, QRS duration, QT interval, QTc interval, and heart rate before LTx and 1 month after LTx; the PR interval, QRS duration, QTc interval, and heart rate were decreased. Particularly, the QTc interval was significantly decreased 1 month after LTx, whereas there was no significant change in the QTc interval from 1 to 6 months thereafter. The PR interval, QT interval, QTc interval, and heart rate were significantly different between the survivor and non-survivor groups. The serial changes in QTc interval before LTx and 1 and 3 months after LTx were also significantly different between the survivor and non-survivor groups (p = 0.040 after adjusting for age and body mass index). Upon dividing the patients based on the range of QTc interval change ≤ -8 ms, >-8–10 ms, >10–35 ms, >35 ms), the survival rate was significantly lower in the group whose QTc interval at 1 month after LTx decreased by > 35 m (p = 0.019). Conclusion: LTx in patients with end-stage lung disease may induce ECG changes. Patients whose QTc interval at 1 month after LTx decreased by > 35 ms have a significantly higher 1-year mortality rate. Hence, these ECG changes may have clinical and prognostic significance.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1440307
JournalFrontiers in Physiology
Volume15
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 Leem, Yu, Sung, Chung, Kim, Woo, Kim, Park, Kim, Yang, Kim, Lee, Kim, Kim, Joung, Park and Lee.

Keywords

  • electrocardiogram
  • end-stage lung disease
  • lung transplantation
  • prognosis
  • risk factor

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