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Clinical Trial
. 1998 Nov;21(11 Pt 2):2480-4.
doi: 10.1111/j.1540-8159.1998.tb01205.x.

Randomized, crossover, controlled comparison of oral loading versus intravenous infusion of propafenone in recent-onset atrial fibrillation

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Randomized, crossover, controlled comparison of oral loading versus intravenous infusion of propafenone in recent-onset atrial fibrillation

G L Botto et al. Pacing Clin Electrophysiol. 1998 Nov.

Abstract

A population of 123 patients with recent-onset (< 72 hours) atrial fibrillation (AF) without heart failure was randomly treated with propafenone (PFN) intravenously (i.v.) (2 mg/kg bolus followed by 0.0078 mg/kg/min infusion) or in a single oral dose (o.s.) (600 mg), or with placebo (PLA) (phase 1). If AF persisted 8 hours later, patients on active drugs received the alternative formulation (crossover), and patients receiving PLA remained on PLA (phase 2). A 24-hour Holter monitoring was performed and conversion to sinus rhythm (SR) at 1, 4, and 8 hours of each phase was used as the criterion of efficacy. Conversion to SR occurred within 1 hour in 48% of patients with i.v.-PFN, 15% with o.s.-PFN, and in 17% with PLA (both P < 0.05 vs i.v.-PFN). Oral PFN was superior to PLA at 4 hours (71% vs 33%, P = 0.001) and 8 hours (78% vs 48%, P < 0.01), and 1 at 8 hours also superior to i.v.-PFN (53%, P < 0.03). The mean conversion time within 4 hours was shorter with i.v.-PFN (25 +/- 15') than with o.s.-PFN (167 +/- 166', P < 0.001) or with PLA (156 +/- 107', P < 0.001). The rates of conversion to SR with i.v.-PFN after o.s.-PFN failure were comparable to PLA at any observation time, whereas nonresponders to i.v.-PFN who received o.s.-PFN had significantly higher conversion rates than with placebo at both 4 hours (65% vs 19%) and 8 hours (76% vs 24%; both P < 0.045). Neither serious adverse effects nor episodes of regular tachycardia with 1:1 AV conduction were noted. PFN administered intravenously or in a single oral loading dose was safe and efficacious in converting recent-onset AF to SR. The rates of conversion were different with different routes of administration: i.v.-PFN was superior to o.s.-PFN over a short observation period, while the overall efficacy of o.s.-PFN was superior at 8 hours.

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