QRS transition zone is related to the electrical axis of the heart in the horizontal plane and is easily determined from the precordial leads of a standard 12-lead ECG. However, whether delayed QRS transition, or clockwise rotation of the heart, carries prognostic implications and predicts sudden cardiac death (SCD) is unclear.
The purpose of this study was to study whether delayed transition is associated with mortality and SCD.
We evaluated 12-lead ECGs of 10,815 Finnish middle-aged subjects from the general population (52% men, mean age 44 ± 8.5 years) and followed them for 30 ± 11 years. Main end-points were mortality and SCD.
Delayed QRS transition at lead V4 or later occurred in 1770 subjects (16.4%) and markedly delayed transition at lead V5 or later in 146 subjects (1.3%). Delayed transition zone was associated with older age, male gender, higher body mass index, hypertension, baseline cardiovascular disease, leftward shift of the frontal QRS axis, wider QRS-T angle, and ECG left ventricular hypertrophy. After adjusting for several clinical and ECG variables, delayed transition was associated with overall mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 1.15, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.07-1.22, P