4.6 Article

Cardiac TdP risk stratification modelling of anti-infective compounds including chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine

Journal

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.210235

Keywords

arrhythmia; electrophysiology; computational biology; pharmacology

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [212203/Z/18/Z]
  2. Royal Society [109371/Z/15/Z]
  3. BHF Centre of Research Excellence [RE/08/004]
  4. Sir Henry Dale Wellcome Trust
  5. Returning Carers' Fund, Medical Sciences Division, University of Oxford
  6. British Heart Foundation
  7. BHF Centre of Research Excellence
  8. Royal Society
  9. Wellcome Trust
  10. British Heart Foundation [PG/18/4/33521, FS/15/8/3115]

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The study used mathematical modeling to investigate the safety profile of HCQ, CQ, and other QT-prolonging anti-infective agents. It found that the risk of Torsade de Pointes arrhythmia increases with concentration and when combined with other QT-prolonging drugs.
Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), the hydroxyl derivative of chloroquine (CQ), is widely used in the treatment of rheumatological conditions (systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis) and is being studied for the treatment and prevention of COVID-19. Here, we investigate through mathematical modelling the safety profile of HCQ, CQ and other QT-prolonging anti-infective agents to determine their risk categories for Torsade de Pointes (TdP) arrhythmia. We performed safety modelling with uncertainty quantification using a risk classifier based on the qNet torsade metric score, a measure of the net charge carried by major currents during the action potential under inhibition of multiple ion channels by a compound. Modelling results for HCQ at a maximum free therapeutic plasma concentration (free C-max) of approximately 1.2 mu M (malaria dosing) indicated it is most likely to be in the high-intermediate-risk category for TdP, whereas CQ at a free C-max of approximately 0.7 mu M was predicted to most likely lie in the intermediate-risk category. Combining HCQ with the antibacterial moxifloxacin or the anti-malarial halofantrine (HAL) increased the degree of human ventricular action potential duration prolongation at some or all concentrations investigated, and was predicted to increase risk compared to HCQ alone. The combination of HCQ/HAL was predicted to be the riskiest for the free C-max values investigated, whereas azithromycin administered individually was predicted to pose the lowest risk. Our simulation approach highlights that the torsadogenic potentials of HCQ, CQ and other QT-prolonging anti-infectives used in COVID-19 prevention and treatment increase with concentration and in combination with other QT-prolonging drugs.

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