Combined inhibition of key potassium currents has different effects on cardiac repolarization reserve and arrhythmia susceptibility in dogs and rabbits

2015 ◽  
Vol 93 (7) ◽  
pp. 535-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoltán Husti ◽  
Katalin Tábori ◽  
Viktor Juhász ◽  
Tibor Hornyik ◽  
András Varró ◽  
...  

A reliable assessment of the pro-arrhythmic potential for drugs in the development phase remains elusive. Rabbits and dogs are commonly used to create models of pro-arrhythmia, but the differences between them with respect to repolarizing potassium currents are poorly understood. We investigated the incidence of drug-induced torsades de pointes (TdP) and measured conventional ECG parameters and the short-term variability of the QT interval (STVQT) following combined pharmacological inhibition of IK1+IKs and IK1+IKr in conscious dogs and anesthetized rabbits. A high incidence of TdP was observed following the combined inhibition of IK1+IKs in dogs (67% vs. 14% in rabbits). Rabbits exhibited higher TdP incidence after inhibition of IK1+IKr (72% vs. 14% in dogs). Increased TdP incidence was associated with significantly larger STVQT in both models. The relatively different roles of IK1 and IKs in dog and rabbit repolarization reserve should be taken into account when extrapolating the results from animal models of pro-arrhythmia to humans. A stronger repolarization reserve in dogs (likely due to stronger IK1 and IKs), and the more human-like susceptibility to arrhythmia of rabbits argues for the preferred use of rabbits in the evaluation of adverse pro-arrhythmic effects.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tibor Hornyik

Proarrhythmia - the triggering of arrhythmias following drug therapy - is a rare, but potentially lethal side-effect of various drugs, and therefore, a major safety concern during drug development. Most often proarrhythmia is caused by the drugs’ potential to interact with various K+-channels in the heart, leading to a prolongation of cardiac repolarization that is usually observed on the ECG as prolonged QT interval (drug-induced acquired long QT syndrome; aLQTS). Although drug-induced long-QT-related proarrhythmia is most frequently found in patients with impaired cardiac repolarization due to disease-induced structural and/or electrophysiological remodelling of the heart; most cellular, tissue and whole animal model systems used for drug safety screening are based on normal, healthy models. This approach has serious limitations; therefore, novel animal models that mimic the pathophysiological conditions under which drugs display the highest proarrhythmic risk - such as models with impaired cardiac repolarization - would be desirable for proarrhythmia safety testing. The aims of the present study: Drug-induced (HMR-1556 to block IKs) acquired LQTS, and various transgenic (congenital) LQTS rabbit models with impaired cardiac repolarization due to cardio-selective overexpression of loss-of-function mutations of human KCNH2 (HERG-G628S, α-subunit of IKr, loss of IKr, LQT2), KCNE1 (KCNE1-G52R, β-subunit of IKs, decreased IKs, LQT5)[1] or both KCNQ1 and KCNE1 transgenes (LQT2-5) were used to investigate: - the proarrhythmic potential of SZV-270, a novel antiarrhythmic drug candidate with combined Class I/B and Class III effects (acquired LQTS model). - the electrophysiological characteristics of a newly generated, double-transgenic LQT2-5 rabbit model - the utility of transgenic LQT2, LQT5 and LQT2-5 rabbit models for more reliable prediction of drug-induced ventricular arrhythmias Main findings: The acquired LQTS rabbit proarrhythmia model with pharmacologically reduced repolarization reserve (by the IKs inhibitor HMR-1556) was able to predict the known torsadogenic potential of the IKr blocker dofetilide, while indicated no SZV-270-induced proarrhythmia risk. This advantageous electrophysiological effect of the SZV-270 - prolongation of ventricular repolarization without increased arrhythmia risk - is assumed to be attributed to its combined IKr (Class III) and INa (Class I/B) blocking characteristics. Transgenic LQTS rabbit models reflected patients with clinically ‘silent’ - normal QT interval (LQT5) - or 'manifest' - prolonged QT interval (LQT2 and LQT2-5) - impairment in cardiac repolarization reserve capacity due to different pathomechanisms. The LQTS animals were more sensitive in detecting IKr - (LQT5) or IK1/IKs - (LQT2 and LQT2-5) blocking properties of drugs compared to healthy wild type (WT) animals. Impaired QT-shortening capacity at fast heart rates was observed due to disturbed IKs function in LQT5 and LQT2-5. Importantly, the transgenic LQTS models did not only show more pronounced changes in different proarrhythmia markers in response to potassium channel blockers but also exhibited higher incidence, longer duration and more malignant type of ex vivo arrhythmias than WT. Conclusions: Drug-induced and transgenic LQTS rabbit models reflect human pathophysiological settings - patients with reduced repolarization reserve - that favour drug-induced arrhythmia formation. As they demonstrate increased sensitivity to different specific ion-channel blockers (IKr-blockade in LQT5 or in HMR-1556 induced acquired LQTS model, IK1 - and IKs - blockade in LQT2 and LQT2-5), their combined use could provide more reliable, and more thorough prediction of (multi-channel-based) pro-arrhythmic potential of novel drug candidates especially in the setting of impaired cardiac repolarization reserve.


2021 ◽  
pp. 026988112110034
Author(s):  
Leif Hommers ◽  
Maike Scherf-Clavel ◽  
Roberta Stempel ◽  
Julian Roth ◽  
Matthias Falter ◽  
...  

Background: Drug-induced prolongation of cardiac repolarization limits the treatment with many psychotropic drugs. Recently, the contribution of polygenic variation to the individual duration of the QT interval was identified. Aims: To explore the interaction between antipsychotic drugs and the individual polygenic influence on the QT interval. Methods: Retrospective analysis of clinical and genotype data of 804 psychiatric inpatients diagnosed with a psychotic disorder. The individual polygenic influence on the QT interval was calculated according to the method of Arking et al. Results: Linear regression modelling showed a significant association of the individual polygenic QT interval score (ßstd = 0.176, p < 0.001) and age (ßstd = 0.139, p < 0.001) with the QTc interval corrected according to Fridericia’s formula. Sex showed a nominal trend towards significance (ßstd = 0.064, p = 0.064). No association was observed for the number of QT prolonging drugs according to AZCERT taken. Subsample analysis ( n = 588) showed a significant association of potassium serum concentrations with the QTc interval (ßstd = −0.104, p = 0.010). Haloperidol serum concentrations were associated with the QTc interval only in single medication analysis ( n = 26, ßstd = 0.101, p = 0.004), but not in multivariate regression analysis. No association was observed for aripiprazole, clozapine, quetiapine and perazine, while olanzapine and the sum of risperidone and its metabolite showed a negative association. Conclusions: Individual genetic factors and age are main determinants of the QT interval. Antipsychotic drug serum concentrations within the therapeutic range contribute to QTc prolongation on an individual level.


Author(s):  
Leila Topal ◽  
Muhammad Naveed ◽  
Péter Orvos ◽  
Bence Pászti ◽  
János Prorok ◽  
...  

AbstractCannabis use is associated with known cardiovascular side effects such as cardiac arrhythmias or even sudden cardiac death. The mechanisms behind these adverse effects are unknown. The aim of the present work was to study the cellular cardiac electrophysiological effects of cannabidiol (CBD) on action potentials and several transmembrane potassium currents, such as the rapid (IKr) and slow (IKs) delayed rectifier, the transient outward (Ito) and inward rectifier (IK1) potassium currents in rabbit and dog cardiac preparations. CBD increased action potential duration (APD) significantly in both rabbit (from 211.7 ± 11.2. to 224.6 ± 11.4 ms, n = 8) and dog (from 215.2 ± 9.0 to 231.7 ± 4.7 ms, n = 6) ventricular papillary muscle at 5 µM concentration. CBD decreased IKr, IKs and Ito (only in dog) significantly with corresponding estimated EC50 values of 4.9, 3.1 and 5 µM, respectively, without changing IK1. Although the EC50 value of CBD was found to be higher than literary Cmax values after CBD smoking and oral intake, our results raise the possibility that potassium channel inhibition by lengthening cardiac repolarization might have a role in the possible proarrhythmic side effects of cannabinoids in situations where CBD metabolism and/or the repolarization reserve is impaired.


2013 ◽  
pp. 127-136
Author(s):  
Gianluca Airoldi

Acute agitation occurs in a variety of medical and psychiatric conditions, and the management of agitated, abusive, or violent patients is a common problem in the emergency department. Rapid control of potentially dangerous behaviors by physical restraint and pharmacologic tranquillization is crucial to ensure the safety of the patient and health-care personnel and to allow diagnostic procedures and treatment of the underlying condition. The purpose of this article (the first in a 2-part series) is to review the extensive safety data published on the antipsychotic medications currently available for managing situations of this type, including older neuroleptics like haloperidol, chlorpromazine, and pimozide as well as a number of the newer atypical antipsychotics (olanzapine, risperidone, ziprasidone). Particular attention is focused on the ability of these drugs to lengthen the QT interval in surface electrocardiograms. This adverse effect is of major concern, especially in light of the reported relation between QT interval and the risk of sudden death. In patients with the congenital long-QT syndrome, a long QT interval is associated with a fatal paroxysmal ventricular arrhythmia knownas torsades de pointes. Therefore, careful evaluation of the QT-prolonging properties and arrhythmogenic potential of antipsychotic drugs is urgently needed. Clinical assessment of drug-induced QT-interval prolongation is strictly dependent on the quality of electrocardiographic data and the appropriateness of electrocardiographic analyses. Unfortunately, measurement imprecision and natural variability preclude a simple use of the actually measured QT interval as a surrogate marker of drug-induced proarrhythmia. Because the QT interval changes with heart rate, a rate-corrected QT interval (QTc) is commonly used when evaluating a drug’s effect. In clinical settings, themost widely used formulas for rate-correction are those of Bazett (QTc=QT/RR^0.5) and Fridericia (QTc=QT/RR^0.33), both of which standardize themeasuredQTinterval to an RRinterval of 1 s (heart rate of 60 bpm).However, QT variability can also be influenced by other factors that are more difficult to measure, including body fat, meals, psycho-physical distress, and circadian and seasonal fluctuations.


Author(s):  
Richard S Varga ◽  
Tibor Hornyik ◽  
Zoltán Husti ◽  
Zsófia Kohajda ◽  
Gábor Krajsovszky ◽  
...  

Cardiovascular diseases are the leading causes of mortality. Sudden cardiac death is most commonly caused by ventricular fibrillation (VF). Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained cardiac arrhythmia and a major cause of stroke and heart failure. Pharmacological management of VF and AF remains suboptimal due to limited efficacy of antiarrhythmic drugs and their ventricular proarrhythmic adverse effects. In this study, the antiarrhythmic and cardiac cellular electrophysiological effects of SZV-270, a novel compound, were investigated in rabbit and canine models. SZV-270 significantly reduced the incidence of VF in rabbits subjected to coronary artery occlusion/reperfusion, reduced the incidence of burst-induced AF in a tachypaced conscious canine model of AF. SZV-270 prolonged frequency corrected QT interval, lengthened action potential duration and effective refractory period in ventricular and atrial preparations and blocked IKr in isolated cardiomyocytes (Class III effects), reduced maximum rate of depolarization (Vmax) at cycle lengths smaller than 1000 ms in ventricular preparations (Class I/B effect). Importantly, SZV-270 did not provoke Torsades de Pointes arrhythmia in an anesthetized rabbit proarrhythmia model characterized by impaired repolarization reserve. In conclusion, SZV-270 with its combined Class I/B and III effects can prevent re-entry arrhythmias with reduced risk of provoking drug-induced Torsades de Pointes.


2020 ◽  
pp. postgradmedj-2020-138661
Author(s):  
Rani Khatib ◽  
Fatima R N Sabir ◽  
Caroline Omari ◽  
Chris Pepper ◽  
Muzahir Hassan Tayebjee

Many drug therapies are associated with prolongation of the QT interval. This may increase the risk of Torsades de Pointes (TdP), a potentially life-threatening cardiac arrhythmia. As the QT interval varies with a change in heart rate, various formulae can adjust for this, producing a ‘corrected QT’ (QTc) value. Normal QTc intervals are typically <450 ms for men and <460 ms for women. For every 10 ms increase, there is a ~5% increase in the risk of arrhythmic events. When prescribing drugs associated with QT prolongation, three key factors should be considered: patient-related risk factors (eg, female sex, age >65 years, uncorrected electrolyte disturbances); the potential risk and degree of QT prolongation associated with the proposed drug; and co-prescribed medicines that could increase the risk of QT prolongation. To support clinicians, who are likely to prescribe such medicines in their daily practice, we developed a simple algorithm to help guide clinical management in patients who are at risk of QT prolongation/TdP, those exposed to QT-prolonging medication or have QT prolongation.


2008 ◽  
Vol 295 (6) ◽  
pp. H2264-H2272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katja E. Odening ◽  
Omar Hyder ◽  
Leonard Chaves ◽  
Lorraine Schofield ◽  
Michael Brunner ◽  
...  

Anesthetic agents prolong cardiac repolarization by blocking ion currents. However, the clinical relevance of this blockade in subjects with reduced repolarization reserve is unknown. We have generated transgenic long QT syndromes type 1 (LQT1) and type 2 (LQT2) rabbits that lack slow delayed rectifier K+ currents ( IKs) or rapidly activating K+ currents ( IKr) and used them as a model system to detect the channel-blocking properties of anesthetic agents. Therefore, LQT1, LQT2, and littermate control (LMC) rabbits were administered isoflurane, thiopental, midazolam, propofol, or ketamine, and surface ECGs were analyzed. Genotype-specific heart rate correction formulas were used to determine the expected QT interval at a given heart rate. The QT index (QTi) was calculated as percentage of the observed QT/expected QT. Isoflurane, a drug that blocks IKs, prolonged the QTi only in LQT2 and LMC but not in LQT1 rabbits. Midazolam, which blocks inward rectifier K+ current ( IK1), prolonged the QTi in both LQT1 and LQT2 but not in LMC. Thiopental, which blocks both IKs and IK1, increased the QTi in LQT2 and LMC more than in LQT1. By contrast, ketamine, which does not block IKr, IKs, or IK1, did not alter the QTi in any group. Finally, anesthesia with isoflurane or propofol resulted in lethal polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (pVT) in three out of nine LQT2 rabbits. Transgenic LQT1 and LQT2 rabbits could serve as an in vivo model in which to examine the pharmacogenomics of drug-induced QT prolongation of anesthetic agents and their proarrhythmic potential. Transgenic LQT2 rabbits developed pVT under isoflurane and propofol, underlining the proarrhythmic risk of IKs blockers in subjects with reduced IKr.


2002 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 57-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory D. Sides

Prolongation of the QT interval on the surface 12-lead electrocardiogram is widely accepted as a biomarker for the potential of a drug to produce torsades de pointes and/or sudden death. Detection of drug-induced prolongation of the QT interval in animals and man is frequently confounded by extrinsic and intrinsic factors that limit the ability to detect a true drug effect. In particular drugs that increase heart rate show an apparent increase in QT interval that confounds assessment of a true drug effect on cardiac ventricular repolarization. The basis for the use of the QT interval as a biomarker will be examined.


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