Does ivabradine reduce dobutamine-induced ventricular arrhythmias in patients with decompensated heart failure requiring inotropic support?
Ivabradine attenuates the arrhythmogenic effect of low and moderate doses of dobutamine in patients with decompensated heart failure.
BACKGROUND: Indirect evidences suggest that the If blocker ivabradine may exert an antiarrhythmic effect in ventricular myocardium in heart failure (HF) patients by inhibiting spontaneous depolarisations, but the clinical relevance of this mechanism is not known. Dobutamine (DOB) has been known to increase heart rate and the incidence of cardiac arrhythmias. AIM: In this study, we evaluated the effects of ivabradine on DOB-induced ventricular arrhythmias and compared them with those of beta-blocker (BB) therapy. METHODS: Patients with decompensated HF requiring inotropic support, left ventricular ejection fraction 0.05), consistent with a protective effect of beta-blockade. Ivabradine reduced VPCs by 43% at 5 μg/kg/min DOB and by 38% at 10 μg/kg/min DOB against the control group (VPCs median 256 vs. 147 and 251 vs. 158) in the absence of significant differences at 15 μg/kg/min DOB between the control and ivabradine groups (overall p > 0.05). Thus, ivabradine administered without background beta-blockade attenuated the arrhythmogenic effect of increasing doses of DOB in the low and moderate DOB dose but not in the high DOB dose. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with decompensated HF, ivabradine appears to reduce the incidence of VPCs in response to low and medium DOB dose. Whether the anti-arrhythmic effect of ivabradine is additive to the anti-arrhythmic effect of beta-blockade requires further investigation; this should also determine the clinical significance of ventricular arrhythmia attenuation with ivabradine.
Mert et al. (Thu,) studied this question.