Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2922622 | Heart Rhythm | 2012 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Pharmacological safety evaluation of (pro) drugs includes cardiac safety assessment of proarrhythmic liability in healthy tissue with emphasis on the rapid component of the delayed rectifier (IKr). The lack of (1) an arrhythmic end point, (2) tests in remodeled, predisposed tissue, and (3) testing chronic drug influence on channel trafficking impairs on the drawn conclusions of these assays regarding drug safety. Moreover, the currently used human ether-Ã -go-go-related gene assays, action potential duration, prolongation in multicellular preparations, or the QT interval have significant shortcomings in their prediction of an increased risk for drug-induced torsades de pointes arrhythmia. In this review, it will be proposed that beat-to-beat variability of repolarization quantified as short-term variability can (1) discriminate between safe and unsafe drugs even under predisposed and highly arrhythmogenic conditions despite accompanying QT prolongation and (2) identify the individual at risk for subsequent arrhythmic events.
Keywords
QTcrapid component of the delayed rectifier potassium currentchronic atrioventricular blockCAVBIKrTorsades de pointesBVRTDPAPDLQTSSTVelectrocardiogramECGBeat-to-beat variability of repolarizationShort-term variabilityDrugsRepolarizationLong QT syndromecorrected QT intervalAction potential durationBiomarkers
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Authors
Rosanne MSc, Sofieke C. MD, Marcel A.G. PhD, Jet D.M. Beekman, Mathias MD, PhD, Marc A. PhD,