Barrett et al., The American Journal of Medicine, 2014

Comparison of 24-hour Holter monitoring with 14-day novel adhesive patch electrocardiographic monitoring.

A DISCUSSION WITH:

Yaw Adjei-Poku, MD
Device Clinic Medical Director at New Mexico Heart Institute

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Excerpt from:
The American Journal of Medicine

Background

Cardiac arrhythmias are remarkably common and routinely go undiagnosed because they are often transient and asymptomatic. Effective diagnosis and treatment can substantially reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with cardiac arrhythmias. The Zio patch (iRhythm Technologies, Inc, San Francisco, Calif) is a novel, single-lead electrocardiographic (ECG), lightweight, Food and Drug Administration-cleared, continuously recording ambulatory adhesive patch monitor suitable for detecting cardiac arrhythmias in patients referred for ambulatory ECG monitoring.

Methods

A total of 146 patients referred for evaluation of cardiac arrhythmia underwent simultaneous ambulatory ECG recording with a conventional 24-hour Holter monitor and a 14-day adhesive patch monitor. The primary outcome of the study was to compare the detection arrhythmia events over total wear time for both devices. Arrhythmia events were defined as detection of any 1 of 6 arrhythmias, including supraventricular tachycardia, atrial fibrillation/flutter, pause greater than 3 seconds, atrioventricular block, ventricular tachycardia, or polymorphic ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation. McNemar’s tests were used to compare the matched pairs of data from the Holter and the adhesive patch monitor.

Results

Over the total wear time of both devices, the adhesive patch monitor detected 96 arrhythmia events compared with 61 arrhythmia events by the Holter monitor (P < .001).

Conclusions

Over the total wear time of both devices, the adhesive patch monitor detected more events than the Holter monitor. Prolonged duration monitoring for detection of arrhythmia events using single-lead, less-obtrusive, adhesive-patch monitoring platforms could replace conventional Holter monitoring in patients referred for ambulatory ECG monitoring.

 

Disclosures

This study was supported in part by Clinical and Translational Science Award funding to the Scripps Translational Science Institute (National Institutes of Health/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences UL1 TR000109 ) and iRhythm Technologies.

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Reprinted from The American Journal of Medicine, 127/1, Barrett PM, Komatireddy R, Haaser S, et al., Comparison of 24-hour Holter monitoring with 14-day novel adhesive patch electrocardiographic monitoring, 95.e11-95.e9.5E17, copyright 2014. Permission to use conveyed through the Creative Commons user license.