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Olanzapine prolongs cardiac repolarization by blocking the rapid component of the delayed rectifier potassium current
1 Faculty of Pharmacy, Université de Montréal,
Montréal, Canada.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Prolongation of the QT interval has been observed during treatment with olanzapine, a thienobenzodiazepine antipsychotic agent. Our objectives were 1) to characterize the effects of olanzapine on cardiac repolarization and 2) to evaluate effects of olanzapine on the major time-dependent outward potassium current involved in cardiac repolarization, namely IKr (IKr: rapid component of the delayed rectifier potassium current). Isolated, buffer-perfused guinea pig hearts (n = 40) were stimulated at different pacing cycle lengths (150-250 msec) and exposed to olanzapine at concentrations ranging from 1 to 100 µM. Olanzapine increased monophasic action potential duration measured at 90% repolarization (MAPD90) in a concentration-dependent manner by 6.7 ± 0.7 msec at 3 µM but by 26.0 ± 4.3 msec at 100 µM (250 msec cycle length). Increase in MAPD90 was also reverse frequency dependent; 30 µM olanzapine increased MAPD90 by 28.0 ± 6.2 msec at a pacing cycle length of 250 msec but by only 18.9 ± 2.2 msec at a pacing cycle length of 150 msec. Experiments in HERG-transfected (HERG: human ether-a-gogo-related gene) HEK293 cells (n = 36) demonstrated concentration-dependent block of the rapid component (IKr) of the delayed rectifier potassium current: tail current was decreased 50% at olanzapine 3.8 µM. Olanzapine possesses direct cardiac electrophysiological effects similar to those of class III anti-arrhythmic drugs. These effects were observed at concentrations that can be measured in patients under conditions of impaired drug elimination such as renal or hepatic insufficiency, during co-administration of other CYP1A2 substrates/inhibitors or after drug overdose. These results offer a new potential explanation for QT prolonging effects observed during olanzapine treatment in patients. Key Words: antipsychotics, drug-induced long QT syndrome, potassium channel, torsades de pointes, arrhythmia
First published on November 8, 2006, doi:10.1177/0269881106072669 This article has been cited by other articles:
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