No influence on cardiac arrhythmia or heart rate from long-term treatment with tiotropium/ olodaterol versus monocomponents by holter ecg analysis in patients with moderate-to-very-severe copd

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Abstract

Background: Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cardiovascular comorbidities may have an increased risk of medication-related cardiac arrhythmias. We therefore performed an analysis of Holter electrocardiogram (ECG) data from two large, long-term, controlled clinical COPD trials to investigate whether tiotropium/olodaterol increased the risk of cardiac arrhythmia and mean heart rate. Methods: We analyzed Holter ECG data from a representative subset of patients (N=506) from the two pooled replicate studies (TONADO 1 and 2) assessing tiotropium/olodaterol 5/5 µg therapy versus tiotropium 5 µg or olodaterol 5 µg monotherapy, inhaled once daily (two single inhalations) using the Respimat® Soft Mist™ inhaler device. Additionally, major adverse cardiac events (MACE) with tiotropium/olodaterol were assessed versus the respective monotherapies. Results: After 12 weeks of treatment, there was no difference in the number of patients who had an increase or decrease from baseline in 24-hour supraventricular premature beats or ventricular premature beats between tiotropium/olodaterol 5/5 µg combination therapy and its monocomponents. Compared with baseline, a small but statistically significant increase in adjusted mean heart rate was observed for tiotropium 5 µg (+1.6 beats per minute [bpm]; P=0.0010), but no difference was observed for olodaterol 5 µg (+0.3 bpm; P=0.2778) or tiotropium/olodaterol 5/5 µg (–0.1 bpm; P=0.4607). MACE and fatal MACE were limited to 1 to 3 patients across treatment groups. Conclusion: Compared with the compounds given as monotherapy, treatment with tiotro-pium/olodaterol fixed-dose combination therapy is not associated with medically relevant or statistically significant effects on arrhythmia as assessed by Holter ECG. Based on these findings, there is no evidence to assume a clinically relevant impact on cardiac function from dual tiotropium/olodaterol treatment. Trial Registration: TONADO 1 (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01431274); TONADO 2 (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01431287).

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Andreas, S., Bothner, U., de la Hoz, A., Kloer, I., Trampisch, M., & Alter, P. (2020). No influence on cardiac arrhythmia or heart rate from long-term treatment with tiotropium/ olodaterol versus monocomponents by holter ecg analysis in patients with moderate-to-very-severe copd. International Journal of COPD, 15, 1945–1953. https://doi.org/10.2147/COPD.S246350

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