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Review
. 1997 Aug;54(2):312-30.
doi: 10.2165/00003495-199754020-00010.

Ibutilide. A review of its pharmacological properties and clinical potential in the acute management of atrial flutter and fibrillation

Affiliations
Review

Ibutilide. A review of its pharmacological properties and clinical potential in the acute management of atrial flutter and fibrillation

R H Foster et al. Drugs. 1997 Aug.

Abstract

Ibutilide is the first 'pure' class III antiarrhythmic drug to become available. Its predominant action is prolongation of the myocardial action potential duration. This appears to be achieved by a unique ionic mechanism of action that involves activation of a late inward sodium current and possibly blockade of the rapidly activating component of the cardiac delayed rectifier potassium current. Intravenous ibutilide 0.01 to 0.025 mg/kg or 1 to 2 mg successfully converted atrial flutter or fibrillation to sinus rhythm in 33 to 49% of patients in 2 placebo-controlled trials involving 439 patients with sustained arrhythmia. In a third trial in 300 patients who developed atrial flutter or fibrillation after cardiac surgery, ibutilide 2 mg successfully converted the arrhythmia in 57% of patients. The mean times to conversion were < or = 30 minutes in these trials. In 3 comparative trials, ibutilide was significantly more effective than racemic sotalol or procainamide in terminating atrial flutter or fibrillation. The pretreatment duration of the arrhythmia is an important predictor of the success of ibutilide treatment; the greatest conversion rates are achieved when the arrhythmia is of recent onset (i.e. < or = 30 days' duration). Ibutilide is more effective in terminating atrial flutter than atrial fibrillation. Adverse events associated with ibutilide are predominantly cardiovascular. Sustained polymorphic ventricular tachycardia developed in 1.7%, and non-sustained polymorphic ventricular tachycardia in 2.7%, of 586 patients treated with ibutilide in clinical trials. However, no proarrhythmia-related deaths have been reported with the use of ibutilide. The drug has minimal haemodynamic effects and is associated with few noncardiovascular adverse events. Thus, ibutilide is a useful agent for the pharmacological cardioversion of recent-onset atrial fibrillation or flutter, provided that adequate steps are taken to monitor for proarrhythmic events. The drug causes few noncardiovascular adverse events and has minimal haemodynamic effects. Furthermore, it appears to be more effective than procainamide (especially in patients with atrial flutter) and racemic sotalol.

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