-
-
- Title
- The coming of age of the class III antiarrhythmic principle: retrospective and future
trends.
- Author
- Singh BN
- Address
- Division of Cardiology, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Los Angeles, California 90073,
USA.
- Source
- Am J Cardiol, 78(4A):17-27 1996 Aug 29
- Abstract
- Antiarrhythmic drug therapy is in a state of continuous flux. In the last decade or so,
numerous experimental and clinical studies have revealed that drugs that act by delaying
conduction, while markedly suppressing ventricular arrhythmias, have the proclivity to
increase mortality in subsets of patients with significant cardiac disease. The adverse
impact on mortality was confirmed by placebo-controlled randomized trials as well as
meta-analysis of smaller randomized clinical trials. The latter indicated that beta
blockers exert a beneficial effect on mortality. Benefit from drugs that lengthen
repolarization, especially drugs that have the additional property of blocking sympathetic
excitation, was also seen in relatively small numbers of patients. Sotalol and amiodarone
fell into this category of antiarrhythmic drugs. There were 2 major consequences that
stemmed from the results of these trials. First, the endpoint of clinical trials shifted
to total mortality from surrogates such as defined degree of suppression of ventricular
arrhythmias. Second, concern regarding increases in mortality produced by class I drugs
engendered a shift in favor of drugs that prolong repolarization. Such a shift was
bolstered by the growing body of data that established the efficacy of sotalol and amiodarone
as potent agents for the control of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias. They were
both found to be superior to class I agents. The perception that the critical factor that
mediates their efficacy is the homogeneous prolongation of repolarization has led to the
synthesis and characterization of so-called pure class III agents, which include d-sotalol
and other lKr blockers such as dofetilide, sematilide, E-4031, and almokalant, among
numerous others. The increase in mortality produced by d-sotalol in patients with
myocardial infarction and lowered ejection fraction and in patients with and without heart
failure has led researchers to question how to design future antiarrhythmic molecules. In
the search for an ideal antifibrillatory agent, should emphasis be placed on simple
molecules such as pure class III agents or on those with more complex profiles, such as
sotalol and amiodarone, which exhibit antiadrenergic actions and the ability
to prolong cardiac repolarization? The available data are in favor of the latter approach.