Association of QT-prolonging medication use in CKD with electrocardiographic manifestations

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Abstract

Background and objectives Several drugs used in CKD can prolong electrocardiographic conduction. We examined the use of electrocardiogramQT-prolongingmedications in predialysisCKDand their associationwith QT duration. Design, setting, participants, &measurements In total, 3252 Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort participantswith at least one study electrocardiogram between 2003 and 2011 were included. QT-prolonging medications used in 100 or more visits (n=16, 451 visits) along with diuretics and proton pump inhibitors, given their potential for electrolyte disturbances, were examined for QT interval prolongation. Results Mean QT interval corrected for heart rate was at 414±21 (±SD) milliseconds and prolonged ($450 milliseconds) in 4. 6% of electrocardiograms. QT interval corrected for heart rate was inversely related to serum potassiumand calcium. Medications classified as QT prolonging were taken at 76%of visits, with two or more of these taken at 33% of visits. Of 30 medications examined, eight were associated with statistically significant QT interval corrected for heart rate prolongation after adjustment for comorbidities, potassium, and calcium, including amiodarone (+10±2 milliseconds), metolazone (+7±2 milliseconds), fluoxetine (+4±1 milliseconds), citalopram (+4±1 milliseconds), hydroxyzine (+4±1 milliseconds), escitalopram (+3±2 milliseconds), venlafaxine (+3±1 milliseconds), and furosemide (+3±0 milliseconds). Potassium-depleting diuretics were associated with minimal decrements in potassium (between 0. 1 and 0. 3 mEq/L) and smaller changes in calcium. Diuretics associatedwith a change inQT interval corrected for heart rate before adjustment for potassiumand calciumwere metolazone (+8±3milliseconds), furosemide (+4±1milliseconds), andspironolactone (23±3milliseconds). Most of the QT prolongation associated with metolazone and furosemide, but not spironolactone, remained after adjustment for potassium and calcium. Proton pump inhibitors were not associated with QT prolongation. Conclusions Use of medications associated with QT prolongation is common in CKD; the safety implications of these findings should be considered in these high-risk patients.

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Snitker, S., Doerfler, R. M., Soliman, E. Z., Deo, R., St. Peter, W. L., Kramlik, S., … Fink, J. C. (2017). Association of QT-prolonging medication use in CKD with electrocardiographic manifestations. Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 12(9), 1409–1417. https://doi.org/10.2215/CJN.12991216

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