Fang Shawn Foo

and 9 more

Introduction Implant rates for cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED), including permanent pacemakers (PPM) and implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICD), have increased globally in recent decades. This is the first national study providing a contemporary analysis of national CIED implant trends by sex-specific age groups over an extended period. Methods Patient characteristics and device type were identified for ten years (2009 to 2018) using procedure coding in the National Minimum Datasets, which collects all New Zealand (NZ) public hospital admissions. CIED implant rates represent implants/million population. Results New PPM implant rates increased by 4.6%/year (p<0.001), increasing in all age groups except patients <40 years. Males received 60.1% of new PPM implants, with higher implant rates across all age groups compared to females. The annual increase in age-standardised implant rates was similar for males and females (3.4% vs 3.0%, p=0.4). By 2018 the overall PPM implant rate was 538/million. New ICD implant rates increased by 4.2%/year (p<0.001), increasing in all age groups except patients <40 and ≥80 years. Males received 78.1% of new ICD implants, with higher implant rates across all age groups compared to females. The annual increase in age-standardised implant rates was higher in males compared to females (3.5% vs 0.7%, p<0.001). By 2018 the overall ICD implant rate was 144/million population. Conclusion CIED implant rates have increased steadily in NZ over the past decade but remain low compared to international benchmarks. Males had substantially higher CIED implant rates compared to females, with a growing gender disparity in ICD implant rates.