Ibutilide and novel indexes of ventricular repolarization in persistent atrial fibrillation patients

World J Cardiol. 2013 Jul 26;5(7):242-6. doi: 10.4330/wjc.v5.i7.242.

Abstract

Aim: To examine the effect of ibutilide on novel indexes of repolarization in patients with persistent atrial fibrillation (AF).

Methods: We studied consecutive patients scheduled for elective electrical cardioversion. Intravenous ibutilide (1 + 1 mg) was administered before the electrical cardioversion while close electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring was performed. ECG indexes such as corrected QT interval (QTc), the interval from the peak until the end of T wave (Tpe), and the Tpe/QT ratio were measured before ibutilide infusion and 10 min after the end of infusion.

Results: The final study population consisted of 20 patients (mean age: 67.1 ± 9.9 years, 10 men). Six patients were cardioverted pharmacologically and did not proceed to electrical cardioversion. Two patients developed short non-sustained episodes of torsades de pointes ventricular tachycardia. All but one of the aforementioned ECG indexes increased significantly after ibutilide administration. In specific, the QTc interval increased from 442 ± 29 to 471 ± 37 ms (P = 0.037), the Tpe interval in precordial leads from 96 ms (range 80-108 ms) to 101 ms (range 91-119 ms) (P = 0.021), the Tpe interval in lead II from 79 ms (range 70-88 ms) to 100 ms (range 87-104 ms) (P < 0.001), the Tpe/QT ratio in precordial leads from 0.23 ms (range 0.18-0.26 ms) to 0.26 ms (range 0.23-0.28 ms) (P = 0.028), and the Tpe interval dispersion from 25 ms (range 23-30 ms) to 35 ms (range 27-39 ms) (P = 0.012). However, the Tpe/QT ratio in lead II did not change significantly.

Conclusion: Ibutilide increases the duration and dispersion of ventricular repolarization. The prognostic value of Tpe and Tpe/QT in the setting of drug-induced proarrhythmia needs further study.

Keywords: Arrhythmic risk; Dispersion of repolarization; Ibutilide; Proarrhythmia; T peak-to-end; T peak-to-end/QT ratio; Ventricular repolarization.