Flecainide significantly shortened QTc by 9.5% (from 517 to 468 ms, P=0.011) in asymptomatic carriers of the SCN5A D1790G mutation, with effects maintained over 9 to 17 months.
Observational (n=13)
p-value: p=0.011
BACKGROUND: Mutations in the cardiac sodium channel gene (SCN5A) can cause one variant of the congenital long-QT syndrome. The effects of some of these mutations on the alpha-subunit channel properties can be blocked by type Ib antiarrhythmic drugs. Recently, we have described a new SCN5A mutation (D1790G) that affects the channel properties in a manner suggesting that sodium blockers of the Ib type will be ineffective in carriers of this mutation. Hence, the ECG effects of flecainide-acetate, a type Ic sodium blocker, were evaluated in carriers of this mutation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Eight asymptomatic mutation carriers and 5 control subjects were studied. Intravenous lidocaine was tested first in only 2 mutation carriers and had no significant effect on any ECG parameter. Flecainide significantly shortened all heart rate-corrected repolarization duration parameters only in carriers and not in control subjects: QT(c) shortened by 9.5% (from 517+/-45 to 468+/-36 ms, P=0.011), and the S-offset to T-onset interval shortened by 64.7% (from 187+/-88 to 66+/-50 ms, P=0.0092). Flecainide also normalized the marked baseline repolarization dispersion in most mutation carriers. These effects among carriers were maintained during long-term (9 to 17 months) outpatient flecainide therapy with no adverse effects. CONCLUSIONS: This report is the first to describe SCN5A mutation carriers who significantly responded to flecainide therapy yet did not respond to lidocaine. These results have important implications for long-QT allele-specific therapeutic strategies.
Benhorin et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in congenital long-QT syndrome (SCN5A mutation D1790G) (n=13). Flecainide vs. Control subjects was evaluated on heart rate-corrected repolarization duration parameters (QTc) (p=0.011). Flecainide significantly shortened QTc by 9.5% (from 517 to 468 ms, P=0.011) in asymptomatic carriers of the SCN5A D1790G mutation, with effects maintained over 9 to 17 months.
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