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Human ex-vivo action potential model for pro-arrhythmia risk assessment.

Authors :
Page, Guy
Ratchada, Phachareeya
Miron, Yannick
Steiner, Guido
Ghetti, Andre
Miller, Paul E.
Reynolds, Jack A.
Wang, Ken
Greiter-Wilke, Andrea
Polonchuk, Liudmila
Traebert, Martin
Gintant, Gary A.
Abi-Gerges, Najah
Source :
Journal of Pharmacological & Toxicological Methods. Sep2016, Vol. 81, p183-195. 13p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

While current S7B/E14 guidelines have succeeded in protecting patients from QT-prolonging drugs, the absence of a predictive paradigm identifying pro-arrhythmic risks has limited the development of valuable drug programs. We investigated if a human ex-vivo action potential (AP)-based model could provide a more predictive approach for assessing pro-arrhythmic risk in man. Human ventricular trabeculae from ethically consented organ donors were used to evaluate the effects of dofetilide, d,l-sotalol, quinidine, paracetamol and verapamil on AP duration (APD) and recognized pro-arrhythmia predictors (short-term variability of APD at 90% repolarization (STV(APD90)), triangulation (ADP90-APD30) and incidence of early afterdepolarizations at 1 and 2 Hz to quantitatively identify the pro-arrhythmic risk. Each drug was blinded and tested separately with 3 concentrations in triplicate trabeculae from 5 hearts, with one vehicle time control per heart. Electrophysiological stability of the model was not affected by sequential applications of vehicle (0.1% dimethyl sulfoxide). Paracetamol and verapamil did not significantly alter anyone of the AP parameters and were classified as devoid of pro-arrhythmic risk. Dofetilide, d,l-sotalol and quinidine exhibited an increase in the manifestation of pro-arrhythmia markers. The model provided quantitative and actionable activity flags and the relatively low total variability in tissue response allowed for the identification of pro-arrhythmic signals. Power analysis indicated that a total of 6 trabeculae derived from 2 hearts are sufficient to identify drug-induced pro-arrhythmia. Thus, the human ex-vivo AP-based model provides an integrative translational assay assisting in shaping clinical development plans that could be used in conjunction with the new CiPA-proposed approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10568719
Volume :
81
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Pharmacological & Toxicological Methods
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
118343805
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vascn.2016.05.016