Improving the predictive ability of the signal-averaged electrocardiogram with a linear logistic model incorporating clinical variables.
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 81 (3) , 797-804
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.81.3.797
Abstract
To improve the predictive accuracy of the signal-averaged electrocardiogram, we created a linear logistic model for predicting ventricular tachycardia during electrophysiologic testing. This signal-averaged electrocardiographic model was created from data obtained from 214 patients undergoing electrophysiologic testing (70 had ventricular tachycardia during electrophysiologic testing) by using stepwise logistic regression to rank eight clinical and nine signal-averaged electrocardiographic variables. The best predictors were ejection fraction, history of infarction, ventricular ectopic pairs or nonsustained ventricular tachycardia on Holter monitoring, QRS duration after 25-Hz filtering, and root mean square voltage of the terminal 40 msec of the QRS complex after 40- and 80-Hz filtering. Cross validation (a statistical technique that can be used to accurately evaluate how a predictive model will perform on a prospective patient population) was used to validate the model. After cross validation, the model's sensitivity was 91% and specificity was 59% for predicting ventricular tachycardia during electrophysiologic testing. This model compared favorably with established 25-Hz late-potential criteria (QRS duration of more than 110 msec and root mean square voltage of less than 25 microV of the terminal 40 msec of the QRS complex; sensitivity, 64%; specificity, 85%) and with established 40-Hz late-potential criteria (QRS duration of more than 114 msec or root mean square voltage of less than 20 microV of the terminal 40 msec of the QRS complex or duration of the low-amplitude signal less than 40 microV at the terminal QRS complex that is greater than 38 msec; sensitivity, 84%; specificity, 54%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of ventricular function and presence or absence of coronary artery disease on results of electrophysiologic testing for asymptomatic nonsustained ventricular tachycardiaThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1990
- Diagnosis and natural history of syncope and the role of invasive electrophysiologic testingThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1989
- A Randomized Clinical Trial of the Noninvasive and Invasive Approaches to Drug Therapy of Ventricular TachycardiaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Optimal bandpass filters for time-domain analysis of the signal-averaged electrocardiogramThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1987
- Survivors of cardiac arrest: Prevention of recurrence by drug therapy as predicted by electrophysiologic testing or electrocardiographic monitoringThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1986
- Estimating the Error Rate of a Prediction Rule: Improvement on Cross-ValidationJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1983
- Recording from the body surface of arrhythmogenic ventricular activity during the S-T segmentThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1978
- Electroide cather recording during malignant ventricular arrythmia following experimental acute myocardial ischemia. Evidence for re-entry due to conduction delay and block in ischemic myocardium.Circulation, 1975
- The Predictive Sample Reuse Method with ApplicationsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1975
- Epicardial and intramural excitation in chronic myocardial infarctionAmerican Heart Journal, 1964