TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of dofetilide on QT dispersion and the prognostic implications of changes in QT dispersion for patients with congestive heart failure
AU - Brendorp, Bente
AU - Elming, Hanne
AU - Jun, Li
AU - Køber, Lars
AU - Torp-Pedersen, Christian
AU - DIAMOND Study Group. Danish Investigations Of Arrhythmia and Mortality On Dofetilide
N1 - Keywords: Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Anti-Arrhythmia Agents; Double-Blind Method; Electrocardiography; Endpoint Determination; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Heart Failure; Humans; Long QT Syndrome; Male; Middle Aged; Multivariate Analysis; Observer Variation; Phenethylamines; Potassium Channel Blockers; Prognosis; Reproducibility of Results; Sulfonamides; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome; Ventricular Dysfunction, Left
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - AIMS: Drug-induced changes in QT dispersion may be a way of detecting harmful repolarisation abnormalities for patients receiving antiarrhythmic drugs affecting ventricular repolarisation. METHODS AND RESULTS: In 463 congestive heart failure (CHF) patients enrolled in the Danish Investigations Of Arrhythmia and Mortality On Dofetilide-CHF (DIAMOND-CHF) study, both pre-treatment and on-treatment day 2-6 QT dispersion was available from standard 12-lead ECGs. Patients were randomised in a double-blind manner to receive either placebo or dofetilide, a new class III antiarrhythmic drug. During a median follow-up of 19 months (minimum 1 year), 179 patients (39%) died (135 patients from cardiac causes). Changes in QT dispersion did not predict all-cause or cardiac mortality for patients treated with dofetilide in multivariate survival analysis (Risk ratio: 1.02, 95% confidence interval: 0.97-1.08, P>0.4). This finding was independent of pre-treatment QT dispersion. Dofetilide caused a small QT dispersion increment of 8 ms, not different from the changes seen in the placebo group (3 ms). CONCLUSION: For patients with CHF and reduced left ventricular systolic function, changes in QT dispersion following treatment with dofetilide do not predict all-cause or cardiac mortality. The dofetilide-induced QT dispersion changes are small and comparable to those seen in placebo treated patients.
AB - AIMS: Drug-induced changes in QT dispersion may be a way of detecting harmful repolarisation abnormalities for patients receiving antiarrhythmic drugs affecting ventricular repolarisation. METHODS AND RESULTS: In 463 congestive heart failure (CHF) patients enrolled in the Danish Investigations Of Arrhythmia and Mortality On Dofetilide-CHF (DIAMOND-CHF) study, both pre-treatment and on-treatment day 2-6 QT dispersion was available from standard 12-lead ECGs. Patients were randomised in a double-blind manner to receive either placebo or dofetilide, a new class III antiarrhythmic drug. During a median follow-up of 19 months (minimum 1 year), 179 patients (39%) died (135 patients from cardiac causes). Changes in QT dispersion did not predict all-cause or cardiac mortality for patients treated with dofetilide in multivariate survival analysis (Risk ratio: 1.02, 95% confidence interval: 0.97-1.08, P>0.4). This finding was independent of pre-treatment QT dispersion. Dofetilide caused a small QT dispersion increment of 8 ms, not different from the changes seen in the placebo group (3 ms). CONCLUSION: For patients with CHF and reduced left ventricular systolic function, changes in QT dispersion following treatment with dofetilide do not predict all-cause or cardiac mortality. The dofetilide-induced QT dispersion changes are small and comparable to those seen in placebo treated patients.
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 11959050
SN - 1567-4215
VL - 4
SP - 201
EP - 206
JO - European Journal of Heart Failure, Supplement
JF - European Journal of Heart Failure, Supplement
IS - 2
ER -