9 research outputs found

    Methadone, QTc interval prolongation and torsade de pointes:Case reports offer the best understanding of this problem

    No full text
    We reviewed the literature and found 31 adult cases and 1 newborn case of methadone-associated QTc interval prolongation and/or torsade de pointes (TdP). Parametric statistics may not be useful in studying this issue because methadone-associated TdP is a very rare event and, hence, “an extreme outlier” consistent with scalable randomness. We may have to rely upon narrative medicine in the form of case reports with all its limitations and hazards to provide our best understanding. We report risk factors for methadone-associated QTc interval prolongation and TdP based on review of published case reports. We believe both drug manufacturers and the FDA would better serve our patients and inform clinicians if they more readily reported drug-induced outliers such as methadone-associated TdP using a case report format

    Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and torsade de pointes:new concepts and new directions derived from a systematic review of case reports

    No full text
    OBJECTIVE: In the light of the recent United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warning to clinicians on using previously approved doses of citalopram because of the purported higher risk of torsade de pointes (TdP), we pursued the broader question: are selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant agents as a group unsafe because they might induce QTc interval prolongation and TdP? METHOD: We reviewed the literature and found only 15 case reports (6 of fluoxetine, 1 of sertraline and 8 of citalopram) of SSRI-associated QTc interval prolongation linking to TdP. RESULTS: A total of 13 cases contained sufficient information for analysis. In the setting of TdP, QTc interval prolongation does not clearly relate to SSRI dose. CONCLUSION: Applying conventional statistics as the FDA does may not be the best tool to study this phenomenon because SSRI-associated TdP is a very rare event and hence best understood as an ‘extreme outlier’. Despite the limitations inherent in case report material, case reports on drug-associated QTc interval prolongation and TdP provide valuable information that should be considered along with other sources of information for clinical guidance

    Quetiapine, QTc interval prolongation, and torsade de pointes

    No full text
    Recently, both the manufacturer of quetiapine and the US Food and Drug Administration warned healthcare providers and patients about quetiapine-induced QTc interval prolongation and torsade de pointes (TdP) when using this drug within the approved labeling.  We reviewed the case-report literature and found 12 case reports of QTc interval prolongation in the setting of quetiapine administration. There were no cases of quetiapine-induced TdP or sudden cardiac death (SCD) among patients using quetiapine appropriately and free of additional risk factors for QTc interval prolongation and TdP. Among the 12 case reports risk factors included female sex (nine cases), coadministration of a drug associated with QTc interval prolongation (eight cases), hypokalemia or hypomagnesemia (six cases) quetiapine overdose (five cases), cardiac problems (four cases), and coadministration of cytochrome P450 3A4 inhibitors (two cases). There were four cases of TdP. As drug-induced TdP is a rare event, prospective studies to evaluate the risk factors associated with QTc prolongation and TdP are difficult to design, would be very costly, and would require very large samples to capture TdP rather than its surrogate markers. Furthermore, conventional statistical methods may not apply to studies of TdP, which is rare and an ‘outlier’ manifestation of QTc prolongation. We urge drug manufacturers and regulatory agencies to periodically publish full case reports of psychotropic drug-induced QTc interval prolongation, TdP, and SCD so that clinicians and investigators may better understand the clinical implications of prescribing such drugs as quetiapine

    Quetiapine, QTc interval prolongation, and torsade de pointes:a review of case reports

    No full text
    Recently, both the manufacturer of quetiapine and the US Food and Drug Administration warned healthcare providers and patients about quetiapine-induced QTc interval prolongation and torsade de pointes (TdP) when using this drug within the approved labeling.  We reviewed the case-report literature and found 12 case reports of QTc interval prolongation in the setting of quetiapine administration. There were no cases of quetiapine-induced TdP or sudden cardiac death (SCD) among patients using quetiapine appropriately and free of additional risk factors for QTc interval prolongation and TdP. Among the 12 case reports risk factors included female sex (nine cases), coadministration of a drug associated with QTc interval prolongation (eight cases), hypokalemia or hypomagnesemia (six cases) quetiapine overdose (five cases), cardiac problems (four cases), and coadministration of cytochrome P450 3A4 inhibitors (two cases). There were four cases of TdP. As drug-induced TdP is a rare event, prospective studies to evaluate the risk factors associated with QTc prolongation and TdP are difficult to design, would be very costly, and would require very large samples to capture TdP rather than its surrogate markers. Furthermore, conventional statistical methods may not apply to studies of TdP, which is rare and an ‘outlier’ manifestation of QTc prolongation. We urge drug manufacturers and regulatory agencies to periodically publish full case reports of psychotropic drug-induced QTc interval prolongation, TdP, and SCD so that clinicians and investigators may better understand the clinical implications of prescribing such drugs as quetiapine
    corecore