Heart pacemakers that have been refurbished function like new.

“Old” pacemakers may still work for years, so doctors are refurbishing used devices and donating them to patients in low- and middle-income countries.

Heart pacemakers that have been refurbished function like new.

CHICAGO — A used pacemaker is a treasure to another person.

Access to the life-saving devices could be increased through a scheme to repair used pacemakers. At the annual American Heart Association meeting on November 17, researchers reported that patients who received remanufactured pacemakers fared as well as those who received new ones in a clinical trial involving over 300 participants.

In a news briefing, cardiac electrophysiologist Thomas Crawford stated that the work could make pacemakers accessible to those who otherwise could not afford them. He stated that the team's goal is to expand its operations and "provide pacemakers to patients in low- and middle-income countries at no cost."

Doctors use pacemakers to treat people with abnormal heartbeats (SN: 4/23/23) The tiny, battery-powered devices are typically implanted in the chest, with wires that thread through a vein and touch the heart. Electrical signals traveling down the wires kick the heart into a steady rhythm.

“We insert thousands and thousands of devices every year,” said Miguel Leal, a cardiac electrophysiologist at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta who was not involved with the work. But the devices are not equally available to patients. Annually in the United States, nearly 800 people per million receive pacemakers. In some countries, that number drops to the single digits.

Crawford sees two potential solutions. The first is designing low-cost pacemakers with basic functions. The second is what his team at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor is trying: reusing old devices.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved pacemakers as single use devices. But today’s pacemakers can chug along for 15 years, sometimes outlasting their original owners. One such example inspired Crawford’s work: a patient who died two months after her pacemaker was implanted. Her husband later brought the device back to her doctors and said, “Can you use this in somebody else?”

“That was a completely eye-opening statement,” Crawford said. It led to his team’s program, called My Heart Your Heart, which collects pacemakers from people who have died or have had them removed. The team cleans and tests the devices and then donates them to patients in need.

In the study, Crawford’s team implanted either a new or refurbished pacemaker in participants in Venezuela, Nigeria, Paraguay, Kenya, Mozambique and Mexico and then tracked outcomes for 90 days. Results from people with either type of device looked nearly identical, the researchers found. Infection rates (a standard risk when implanting devices into the body) were similar in both groups ­­­— around 2 percent — and the team didn’t observe any device malfunctions. Three people with refurbished devices died over the time period studied, though none of the deaths were related to pacemaker malfunction, Crawford said.

According to Crawford, the cost of restoring a pacemaker ranges from $50 to $100. According to him, it is comparable to about $2,000 for a new one in the Global South and about $6,000 for one in the United States.

According to Leal, it will be crucial to check in with participants to see if the reconditioned gadgets are still functioning properly. However, he stated that Crawford's work "is a great example of walking the walk and not just talking the talk" at a time when advocating for fair access to healthcare can be challenging.