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Drug-induced Torsades de Pointes and implications for drug development

Journal

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 475-495

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1046/j.1540-8167.2004.03534.x

Keywords

torsades de pointes; drug effects; long QT syndrome; risk assessment; action potentials; M cells; electrocardiogram; QT interval

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL049989, U19 HL065962, HL 65962, R01 HL047678, U01 HL065962, HL 46681, P01 HL046681, HL49989] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Torsades de pointes is a potentially lethal arrhythmia that occasionally appears as an adverse effect of pharmacotherapy. Recently developed understanding of the underlying electrophysiology allows better estimation of the drug-induced risks and explains the failures of older approaches through the surface ECG. This article expresses a consensus reached by an independent academic task force on the physiologic understanding of drug-induced repolarization changes, their preclinical and clinical evaluation, and the risk-to-benefit interpretation of drug-induced torsades de pointes. The consensus of the task force includes suggestions on how to evaluate the risk of torsades within drug development programs. Individual sections of the text discuss the techniques and limitations of methods directed at drug-related ion channel phenomena, investigations aimed at action potentials changes, preclinical studies of phenomena seen only in the whole (or nearly whole) heart, and interpretation of human ECGs obtained in clinical studies. The final section of the text discusses drug-induced torsades within the larger evaluation of drug-related risks and benefits.

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