The Reproducibility of Global Electrical Heterogeneity ECG Measurements.

Journal: Computing In Cardiology
Published:
Abstract

Background: Global electrical heterogeneity (GEH) is a useful predictor of adverse clinical outcomes. However, reproducibility of GEH measurements on 10-second routine clinical ECG is unknown.

Methods: Data of the prospective cohort study of incident hemodialysis patients (n=253; mean age 54.6±13.5y; 56% male; 79% African American) were analysed. Two random 10-second segments of 5-minute ECG recording in sinus rhythm were compared. GEH was measured as spatial QRS-T angle, spatial ventricular gradient (SVG) magnitude and direction (azimuth and elevation), and a scalar value of SVG measured by (1) sum absolute QRST integral (SAI QRST), and (2) QT integral on vector magnitude signal (iVMQT). Bland-Altman analysis was used to calculate agreement.

Results: For all studied vectorcardiographic metrics, agreement was substantial (Lin's concordance coefficient >0.98), and precision was perfect (>99.99%). 95% limits of agreement were ±14° for spatial QRS-T angle, ±13° for SVG azimuth, ±4° for SVG elevation, ±14 mV*ms for SVG magnitude, and ±17 mV*ms for SAI QRST. SAI QRST and iVMQT were in substantial agreement with each other.

Conclusions: Reproducibility of a 10-second automated GEH ECG measurements was substantial, and precision was perfect.

Authors
Erick Perez Alday, Christopher Hamilton, Annabel Li Pershing, Jose Monroy Trujillo, Michelle Estrella, Stephen Sozio, Bernard Jaar, Rulan Parekh, Larisa Tereshchenko