VDD and DDD pacing following transcatheter aortic valve replacement: a three-year comparative echocardiographic follow-up
M Giannotti Santoro, S Latrofa, L Segreti, A Di Cori, R De Lucia, G Grifoni, A M Canu, S M Viani, V Barletta, M Parollo, G Pestana, C Giannini, S Sbragi, M De Carlo, G ZucchelliAbstract
Background
In patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR), subsequent pacemaker (PM) implantation has been associated with worsening ventricular function and higher heart failure hospitalization rates. Evidence remains scarce about the long-term effects of single lead atrioventricular sequential (VDD) pacing on left and right ventricular function as compared to dual lead (DDD) pacing.
Purpose
We hypothesized that, in patients undergoing PM implantation following TAVR complications, VDD are not significantly different from DDD concerning left and right ventricular function variation over time, as well as native valvular regurgitation.
Methods
Patients from our Centre who underwent VDD or DDD implantation secondary to TAVR complications were retrospectively enrolled. Baseline demographic and echocardiographic data were collected the day before TAVR. Clinical reassessment with echocardiography was performed every six months; for each subject, the latest outpatient visit (up to October 15th, 2025) was included in the analysis.
Results
One hundred eleven patients were enrolled (27 [24%] VDD and 84 [76%] DDD). The population was mainly composed by men (17 [63%] VDD vs. 44 [52%] DDD, p=0.46), presenting with baseline electrocardiographic alterations (17 [63%] VDD vs. 52 [62%] DDD, p=0.93), with a median New York Heart Association (NYHA) class of II (interquartile range, II-III; no differences between groups, p=0.49) and a preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF, 60.0% [55.0-64.0] in VDD vs. 59.5% [55.0-65.0] in DDD, p=0.51). Notably, VDD patients were older than DDD patients (85.0 [81.5-88.0] vs. DDD 82.0 [78.8-85.0] years, p=0.01). Median follow-up time was 1120.0 [823.0-1302.0] days (VDD 1034.5 [895.3-1428.5] vs. DDD 1123.5 [796.3-1277.0] days; p=0.87). Baseline and follow-up echocardiographic data are detailed in Figure 1 and graphically summarized in Figure 2. Median NYHA class at follow-up was similar between groups (class I [I-II] for both groups, p=0.88), and significantly lower than baseline (p<0.001). Notably, echocardiography parameters were substantially stable over time (LVEF 60.0% [55.0-63.5] in VDD, p=0.59; 60.0% [54.5-63.0] in DDD, p=0.60), except for a significant decrease of pulmonary arterial systolic pressure (PASP) from baseline in DDD (35.0 [30.0-45.0] vs. 30.0 [27.0-39.5] mmHg, p=0.03).
Conclusions
This retrospective analysis of TAVR patients suggests that VDD pacing provides comparable echocardiographic outcomes to DDD pacing, with both groups maintaining stable left and right ventricular function over long-term follow-up.Figure 1Figure 2