Cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) include pacemakers (PMs), cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), and implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICDs). Infection is one of the most serious complications following CIED implantation. These infections include superficial pocket infections or vascular infections, Reference Sohail, Uslan and Khan1,Reference Han, Hawkins, Pearman, Birnie and Krahn2 and they are associated with substantial morbidity and mortality that typically require hospitalization and device removal. Reference Sohail, Uslan and Khan1–Reference Palmisano, Accogli and Zaccaria7 Mortality is reported as high as 17.2% with device-related infection. Reference Daneman, Homenauth, Saskin, Ng, Ha and Wijeysundera4 Additionally, CIED infections pose substantial economic burden to healthcare systems, increasing hospital length of stay and direct costs. Reference Rennert-May, Chew, Lu, Chu, Kuriachan and Somayaji3 The growing prevalence of CIED infections is concerning in the context of expanding CIED indications coupled with an aging, multimorbid population. Reference Voigt, Shalaby and Saba6,Reference Greenspon, Patel and Lau8–Reference Cabell, Heidenreich and Chu10
At the hospital level, device-related infections have traditionally been determined through labor-intensive infection prevention and control (IPC) formal surveillance, which is considered the “gold standard.” This type of surveillance may be unachievable where resources are limited, such as smaller centers or rural areas without comprehensive IPC programs. An alternate method of infection surveillance is enabled by administrative data, which facilitates identification of CIED infection within health systems that do not routinely collect formal IPC surveillance data. Reference Rennert-May, Leal and MacDonald11 The use of administrative data codes for identification of complex CIED infection was recently validated with 91% sensitivity and 99% specificity. Reference Rennert-May, Leal and MacDonald11 These administrative codes have not previously been applied to assess the epidemiology of CIED infection following validation, particularly in the Canadian setting.
In this study, we sought to describe the epidemiology of complex infections following CIED implantation among patients in Alberta, Canada, by identifying CIED infections through validated administrative data. Our secondary objectives were to determine the risk factors for CIED infection and to assess the rates of rehospitalization and mortality in this contemporary patient cohort.
Methods
Study design
We conducted a population-based, retrospective cohort study of adult patients (ie, age >18 years) who underwent first-time CIED implantation or generator replacement between January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2019, in Alberta, Canada, which is a province of 4.2 million people served by a single healthcare system.
Study population
Patients were included if they received a CIED during the study period and were followed in Alberta, Canada. Patients were followed for 1 year from their index implant procedure to identify CIED infections. We excluded patients under the age of 18, and if we were unable to identify key demographic information such as location, sex, or age.
Data sources
Paceart
Adults who received a CIED during the study period were identified through the Paceart database, a province-wide repository of all CIED-related clinical encounters within Alberta, Canada, containing information on indications for device implantation, type of device, date of procedure, and basic patient demographics. Patients were included who received CIED implantations of all device types: PMs, ICDs, and CRT devices, including both first-time implants and generator replacements. We censored procedures repeated within 2 years of index surgical date to avoid double counting of encounters related to the same infection.
Alberta Health Services (AHS) analytics
AHS is a province-wide single health system servicing the province of Alberta, Canada. All residents of Alberta are eligible for public health insurance, and >99% participate. Each resident is assigned a personal health number that acts as a unique lifetime identifier enabling linkages to administrative health data. 12 The AHS Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW), accessed through AHS Analytics, contains the Discharge Abstract Database (DAD), National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS), Vital Statistics database, and Alberta Health Registry, for Alberta residents with an Alberta Health Care insurance plan. Hospitalizations were identified in the DAD, mortality data were collected from the Vital Statistics database, and comorbidity data were derived from both the DAD and the NACRS.
Patient characteristics
We recorded patient characteristics including age, sex, device type, generator replacement, number of comorbidities, Elixhauser index, Pampalon deprivation index, urban or rural residence, and year of index procedure. The Elixhauser index is a set of comorbidity measures developed from administrative inpatient data to predict hospital costs, length of stay, and mortality; it is comprehensive compared to other comorbidities indices. Reference Elixhauser, Steiner, Harris and Coffey13 The Pampalon deprivation index is a composite index that uses Canadian census data to create a measure of socioeconomic disparity. 14 The Pampalon indicators are described in the footnote of Table 1. Urban versus rural residence data were determined based on address (ie, postal code).
Note. PM, pacemaker; CRT, cardiac resynchronization therapy; ICD, implanted cardiac defibrillator; LPM, leadless pacemaker; S-ICD, subcutaneous implanted cardiac defibrillator
a Pampalon deprivation index material indicators: proportion of people aged 15 years and older with no high school diploma; population employment ratio of people aged 15 years and older; average income of people aged ≥15 years.
b Pampalon deprivation index social indicators: proportion of individuals aged 15 years and older living alone; proportion of individuals aged ≥15 years and whose marital status is separated, divorced or widowed; proportion of single-parent families.
Outcomes
The primary outcome of interest was development of a complex CIED infection within 1 year of index procedure. Secondary outcomes were all-cause hospitalization and all-cause mortality at 1 year.
We linked Paceart data to the AHS DAD hospital admissions data and International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision in Canada (ICD-10-CA) codes to determine which patients developed a complex SSI within 1 year of the index procedure. This validated administrative algorithm, which demonstrated 91% sensitivity and 99% specificity, searched by ICD-10-CA codes Reference Rennert-May, Leal and MacDonald11 for infection of an implantable cardiovascular or other device (T827, T857), infective endocarditis (I330, I339, I38, I398), and cellulitis of the chest wall or other unspecified site (L0330, L0339, L038, L039). The validated algorithm was based on definitions of complex CIED infections according to the Centre for Disease Control National Healthcare Safety Network (CDC/NHSN) protocols for surgical site infection (SSI), where ‘complex’ SSI included both deep incisional SSI of the fascia or muscle (excluding superficial SSI of skin), and organ-space SSI. 15
Statistical analyses
We summarized baseline patient characteristics as well as characteristics of infected versus uninfected patients, using a χ2 test of proportions. The number of CIED infections was divided by the total number of implants over the study period to obtain the CIED infection rate.
Comparative analysis of the infected versus uninfected cohorts were performed by constructing both univariable and multivariable logistic regression models for the outcome of infection at 1 year. Covariates were selected a priori, and included age, sex, device type, generator replacement, index year, and number of comorbidities. The fit of the model was assessed using the Akaike information criterion. Analyses were conducted using R version 4.1.0 statistical software (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were reported.
Ethics approval for this study was obtained from the University of Calgary Health Research Ethics Board (no. REB20-2186).
Results
Baseline characteristics
In total, 27,830 CIED implants were placed between 2011 and 2019 in Alberta, Canada, and 16,865 of these placed were in men (60.6%). The baseline characteristics of the cohort are summarized in Table 1. Of all CIED implants, 83.6% were in those aged ≥60 years. Pacemakers were the most common device type, comprising 70.4% of all insertions. Of all procedures, 25.3% were generator replacements. Patients were skewed toward higher degrees of social and material deprivation per the Pampalon index, and 76.8% of all patients lived in an urban setting. The Elixhauser comorbidity index ranged from −10 to 58, with a mean of 10.50 (SD, 7.50). The most prevalent comorbidities were hypertension (58.1%), diabetes mellitus (43.9%), and heart failure (39.4%). Pulmonary disease and renal failure were present in 16.9% and 9.8% of the population, respectively.
Clinical outcomes
During the study period, 205 complex infections were identified at 1 year following device implantation, with an overall infection rate of 0.74%. The rate of infection did vary by age group, with the highest rate (2.01%) seen in those aged 18–29 years. The rate of infection decreased by each increasing increment of 10 years. Rates of infection also varied by device type: CRT devices (CRT-defibrillator and CRT-pacemaker types combined) at a rate of 1.28%, ICD at a rate of 0.79%, and pacemakers at a rate of 0.64% (P < .0001).
In univariable analysis, factors that were significant for increased odds of infection were male sex (OR, 1.37; 95% CI, 1.02–1.87; P = .038), CRT device type (OR, 2.02; 95% CI, 1.41–2.84; P ≤ .001), 2 or more comorbidities, and Elixhauser index ≥11.
Factors that were associated with decreased odds of infection, in univariable analysis, included age increments of 10 years (OR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.77–0.91; P ≤ .001), a generator replacement procedure (OR, 0.5; 95% CI, 0.33–0.73; P ≤ .001), and the procedure year of device implantation. Factors that were not associated with infection included material or social deprivation and urban or rural residence. Univariable analysis is summarized in Table 2.
Note. CI, confidence interval; PM, pacemaker; CRT, cardiac resynchronization therapy; ICD, implanted cardiac defibrillator; LPM, leadless pacemaker; S-ICD, subcutaneous implanted cardiac defibrillator.
In multivariable analysis, the variable that remained significantly associated with CIED infections was having 2 or more comorbidities. Elixhauser index was no longer significant. Generator replacement procedures (OR, 0.55, 95% CI, 0.34–0.84; P = .008), age increments of 10 years (OR, 0.73; 95% CI, 0.66–0.82; P ≤ .001), and index procedure after 2014 were associated with decreased risk of infection. Multivariable analysis is summarized in Table 2. Figure 1 shows the infection rates by index procedure year.
The most common comorbidities, including hypertension, heart failure, and complicated diabetes, were independently associated with increased infection risk, as were chronic pulmonary disease, and renal failure. The conditions associated with the greatest risk of infection, in descending order, were acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, valvular disease, substance use disorder, liver disease, fluid and electrolyte disorders, and complicated hypertension. Table 3 provides a summary of the common comorbidities and their associated risk, and complete comorbidity data are available in Supplementary Material Table S1 (online).
Note. CI, confidence interval.
Patients who developed infection were more likely to require hospital admission compared to those who did not develop infection in the year following the index procedure. Of the 27,625 patients without infection, the mean number of admissions was 0.69, compared to 2.63 admissions among the 205 patients with infection. With respect to mortality, patients who developed a complex infection were more likely to die within the year following implantation than those who did not develop infection. Of the patients where mortality data were available, 22 of 175 patients with infection died, compared to 964 deaths in the 24,622 patients without infection. The death rate in the infected group was 10.73% compared to 3.49% in the uninfected group (P < .001).
Discussion
Between 2011 and 2019, there were 27,830 total CIED implants in Alberta, Canada, with a rate of infection of 0.74%. This is a comprehensive, population-based epidemiological evaluation of all CIED infections in Alberta, enabled by validated administrative data. In a large systematic review of CIED infections up to 2013, Reference Polyzos, Konstantelias and Falagas16 an infection rate of 1.2% across retrospective studies was reported. A cohort in Ontario, Canada, reported an overall infection rate of 1.2%, Reference Daneman, Homenauth, Saskin, Ng, Ha and Wijeysundera4 and a similar study in the United States in 2016 found rates as high as 4.2% in administrative, retrospective data Reference Rennert-May, Chew, Lu, Chu, Kuriachan and Somayaji3 ; however, the administrative data in these studies were not validated. Our data show a slightly lower overall infection rate than previous studies.
Previous studies reported rates of CIED infection to be increasing out of proportion to device implantation, and over time. Reference Voigt, Shalaby and Saba6,Reference Greenspon, Patel and Lau8,Reference Joy, Kumar, Poole, London and Olshansky9 One study noted an infection rate that increased from 1.53% in 2004 to 2.41% in 2008 (P < .001). Reference Greenspon, Patel and Lau8 Our data showed a significant decrease in infection rates among the study population from 2014 forward. We offer several hypotheses for this finding. Firstly, there have been several recent clinical trials on prevention of CIED infection, namely PADIT Reference Krahn, Longtin and Philippon17 and WRAP-IT. Reference Tarakji, Mittal and Kennergren18 Sites within Alberta were enrolled in the PADIT trial between 2011 and 2014. Implementation of rigorous trial protocols and infection prevention measures, including an expanded protocol of preoperative cefazolin and vancomycin, postoperative cephalexin, and an intraprocedural wound-pocket wash with bacitracin, may have influenced a decreasing trend of infection within our cohort following trial completion. Secondly, formal surveillance of CIED infections increased in the Calgary region in recent years; the largest provincial zone, servicing ∼1.5 million people. Formal SSI surveillance was implemented in June 2012 and expanded over several years to include stakeholders outside the operating room during the study period, including the electrophysiology suite where many implants are performed. As part of this enhanced surveillance, interventions including surgical bundles and checklists (eg, prophylaxis timing) were introduced, contributing to decreased SSIs within the AHS. The SSI rate in 2011–2012 was 1.0 cases per 100 procedures compared to 0.49 in 2019–2020 (K. Cannon, personal communication, December 15, 2022). We may begin to see broader regression in infection trends as newer studies emerge.
Few other epidemiologic studies have examined markers of inequities, including urban versus rural residence, and socioeconomic disparity, as they relate to risk of infection. In our cohort, infectious outcomes did not differ based on urban or rural living, or Pampalon index, a marker of socioeconomic disparity. 14 This finding is unique. Within a cohort in Ontario, residing in a higher income neighborhood was associated with greater infection risk, as was having a device implanted or replaced in an urban teaching hospital. Reference Daneman, Homenauth, Saskin, Ng, Ha and Wijeysundera4 Within a large US cohort in 2016, higher income quintiles had higher infection-related costs; and urban or rural location of care made no difference in infection risk or costs. Reference Rennert-May, Chew, Lu, Chu, Kuriachan and Somayaji3 One explanation for these findings is that patients of higher income are more likely to undergo device implantation despite higher overall risk profiles. Smaller, rural centers that perform fewer procedures might be expected to have higher infection rates; however, we can speculate that urban teaching hospitals have the greatest infectious complications due to greater numbers of operators in training, Reference Han, Hawkins, Pearman, Birnie and Krahn2,Reference Polyzos, Konstantelias and Falagas16 increased procedural time, Reference Polyzos, Konstantelias and Falagas16 and higher case complexity seen in urban teaching facilities. Our findings of relative equity across income quintiles and place of residence, of the patients that accessed care and when Pampalon index was available, may reflect the single health system model, including CIED clinics, that creates integrated service delivery in Alberta regardless of income or residence. Alternatively, more marginalized, and geographically isolated groups may simply not be represented due to incomplete census data, resulting in skewed findings. We advocate for future studies to include measures of disparity because this may be an underrecognized issue.
Increasing age was associated with reduced infection risk. This finding is aligned with several other reported findings, including the PADIT trial, Reference Krahn, Longtin and Philippon17 in which lower age conferred higher risk in the validated prediction tool. Reference Birnie, Wang and Alings19 Also, a large Danish study of 46,299 patients showed a clear reduction in risk with advancing age. Reference Johansen, Jorgensen and Moller20 The precise biologic explanation for this effect is not known. Researchers have postulated that this effect may be secondary to reduced immune responses in advanced age, less firm connective tissue, or lower likelihood of performing implants in higher-risk clinical scenarios. Reference Johansen, Jorgensen and Moller20
We noted a significantly increased risk of infection among men in univariable analysis. This finding has been reported in other studies, Reference Rennert-May, Chew, Lu, Chu, Kuriachan and Somayaji3,Reference Polyzos, Konstantelias and Falagas16 and needs to be interpreted cautiously because significant enrollment differences remain between men and women regarding device therapy. 21 Women may have higher mortality once infected, Reference Sohail, Henrikson, Braid-Forbes, Forbes and Lerner22 and concern has been raised around sex-biased care, with findings of reduced length of stay and healthcare expenditures for women with device infections in one study. Reference Rennert-May, Chew, Lu, Chu, Kuriachan and Somayaji3 Analysis of a larger population would allow for more meaningful detection of differences between sexes. Further exploration of length of stay and health expenditures as they relate to sex would be valuable.
We identified several key findings regarding patient comorbidities and infection risk. Importantly, renal failure and congestive heart failure confer a 3-fold risk of infection over baseline, and complicated hypertension, valvular disease, substance use disorder, valvular and liver disease confer greater than a four-fold risk. These data can refine shared decision-making with patients regarding individualized procedural risk. These findings should also prompt operators to consider stricter IPC bundles for higher-risk patients, such as operating room practices, patient flow, and patient-specific measures such as antibiotic envelopes at the time of device insertion. Reference Tarakji, Mittal and Kennergren23
In this study, patients who underwent a generator replacement had lower infection rates than first-time procedures (OR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.34–0.84; P = .008). Other studies had similar findings in the meta-analysis by Polyzos, Reference Polyzos, Konstantelias and Falagas16 where 5 of 20 studies examining this procedure found that generator replacement was either protective or not associated with increased infection but was a risk factor in pooled analysis (OR, 1.74; 95% CI, 1.22–2.49). Reference Polyzos, Konstantelias and Falagas16 This may be due to shorter procedural time for generator change than first-time insertion, as well as the possibility that revision procedures stimulate higher level of attention to infection control measures by proceduralists.
Our study had several strengths. This was the largest epidemiologic review of CIED infections in Alberta, Canada, to date, and one of few Canadian studies that contributes to understanding these SSIs. Perhaps most importantly, our method of identifying infections using administrative data was recently validated through a comparative analysis of established ICD-10-CA algorithms and was proven to have comparable validity to the reference standard of IPC surveillance methods. Reference Rennert-May, Leal and MacDonald11 This now-validated method of identifying CIED infections can act as a framework for future surveillance and research.
Our study also had several limitations. It was subject to limitations inherent in a population-based study using administrative data. Administrative data are subject to miscoding; however, the validated data were shown to be 91% sensitive and 99% specific, and they allowed us to characterize an entire population, which would have otherwise been prohibitive due to cost and difficulty in data collection. Another limitation of the study pertained to the retrospective nature of administrative data, and the inability to exclude possible unmeasured factors that may have influenced the relationship between infection, hospitalization, and mortality. We included only patient encounters accessible through discharge data and emergency department visits; thus, meaning superficial infections were excluded. However, these types of infections do not require comparable healthcare resources nor cause substantial patient morbidity. We were unable to determine the Pampalon index for nearly 8,000 patients in our cohort, likely because census data was incomplete. We chose to follow patients for 1 year from the index procedure so some late infections may have been missed; however, this time frame balances adequate surveillance while minimizing capturing infections unrelated to the initial implant.
In summary, we detailed the epidemiology of CIED infections from a population within Alberta, Canada. Our findings were aligned with much of the current body of literature, redemonstrating that patients with younger age and 2 or more comorbidities remain at greatest risk of CIED infection and that the burden of mortality is substantially higher with CIED infection. A novel finding was that our overall infection burden was slightly lower than previously described rates, and patients with implants after 2014 showed a decreasing trend in burden of infection, which may be related to enhanced IPC efforts in Alberta. Further analysis of the microbiology, costs, and implications of these infections at the system level is warranted.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2023.48
Acknowledgments
We acknowledge the in-kind support for this project provided by Alberta Health Services’ Infection Prevention and Control.
Financial support
The authors received third-party funding to support this work from the M.S.I. Foundation. The M.S.I. Foundation had no role in the design of the study, nor any of the analysis or interpretation of data associated with the study.
Conflicts of interest
All authors report no conflicts of interest relevant to this article.