Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Clinical Chemistiy 42:8(B) 1312-1315 (1996) Titrating cardiovascular drugs I. FRANK MARCUS Titrating cardiovascular drugs is important to ensure efficacy and to minimize the risk of toxicity. A serum assay is extremely useful to guide digoxin therapy. Assessment of the effect of warfarin on blood clotting should be used to adjust dose. Serum cholesterol and lipid measurements guide therapy with antilipemic agents. The antihypertensive drugs, beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, and vasodilators can be assessed by their clinical effects. There is no strict relation between serwn concentration of antiarrhythmic drugs and their effects, nor is it clear that the long-term efficacy of these drugs can be assessed by surrogate A. Therapeutic drug measurement: useful/essential Cardiac glycoside Digoxin B. Endpont or functional assays: useful/essential Anticoagulants Warfarin Heparin Antilipemics HMG-C0A reduction inhibitors (Lovastatin) Bile acid sequestrants (cholestyramine) C. Serum assay not needed: effect is measurable clinically Antihypertensives Beta blockers Calcium channel blockers Coronary vasodilators Diuretics 0. Therapeutic drug measurement: of limited clinical value Antiarrhythmic drugs Amiodarone Procainamide Quinidine end points. INDEXING drugs. Table 1. Methods to titrate cardiovasculardrugs. masS: digoxin . drug anticoagulants . warfarin monitoring #{149} antiarrhythmic blockers #{149} beta Cardiovascular drug categories include inotropic agents such as digoxin; anticoagulants such as warfarin and heparin; antiarrhythmic drugs including amiodarone, flecainide, and quinidine; antihypertensive agents with a variety of mechanisms; beta blockers; and antilipemic drugs. Titration of cardiovascular drugs is important to ensure efficacy and to minimize the risk of toxicity. The means used to accomplish these goals are shown in Table 1. For certain cardiovascular drugs, it is imperative to use therapeutic drug measurements in serum or blood. For some, end point effects or functional assays are useful or imperative; for others, serum assays are unnecessary because the effects are measurable clinically. The serum assay is of limited clinical value to titrate some cardiovascular drugs because of the wide range of values associated with therapeutic effect and because the serum values may or may not predict the clinical response. In addition, toxicity may not be related to the dose or the serum value. The characteristics of the ideal drug to be monitored by serum or blood concentration are listed in Table 2. Digoxin, an excellent example of such a drug, is a cardiac glycoside, the major action of which is to increase the force of contraction of the heart, and digitalis has been in use for >200 years for the treatment of congestive heart failure, a use that William Withering astutely observed in 1775 [1]. The difficulty in relating the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, 1501 N. Campbell, 85724. Fax 520-626-4333; e-mail [email protected]. Received February 15, 1996; accepted March 25, 1996. Tucson, HMG-C0A, 3-tydroxy-3-methylgIutaryI-coenzyme A appropriate dose of digitalis to effect was illustrated by his initial recommendations, which were to “continue the medicine until the urine flows, or sickness or purging take place.” Withering further observed that in some patients the “pulse would be retarded to an alarming degree, without any other preceding effect.” Therefore, he altered his recommendation for the use of digitalis to “let it be continued until it either acts on the kidneys, the stomach, the pulse or the bowels; let it be stopped upon the appearance of any one of these effects” [1]. It was not until 1969 that Smith et al. [2] developed a serum assay for digoxin. The results obtained by this assay confirmed the clinical observation that this drug has a narrow therapeutic toxic ratio. Patients who received 0.25 mg daily and who did not have symptoms of toxicity such as nausea or vomiting had digoxin serum concentrations of 1-2 g/L, whereas patients who had signs or symptoms of toxicity usually had serum digoxin concentrations >2 ig/L. Smith et al. also observed that the major factor that led to the higher digoxin concentrations was not the dose but appeared to be diminished renal function. Data indicate that if AZ 1312 Clinical Chemistry 42, No. 8(B), 1996 digoxin concentrations are >2 .tg/L, the likelihood of the patient’s experiencing toxic effects is almost 8 times greater than for individuals with digoxin concentrations of 1.0 .tg/L. Not only does digoxin have a narrow therapeutic-to-toxic ratio, but also the manifestations of toxicity can be serious or fatal because this drug may enhance cardiac automaticity and cause ventricular tachycardia and (or) ventricular fibrillation. As previously mentioned, it is difficult to assess clinically an increase in the inotropic effect. Because it is desirable to obtain the maximum inotropic effect of digitalis without toxicity and because the therapeutic-to-toxic ratio is narrow, it has not been clear what serum concentration would be most appropriate to yield the desired inotropic effect. Young et al. [3] reported that patients with congestive heart failure who were treated with digoxin and who had serum concentrations of 0.9-1.2 j.tg/L could exercise substantially longer than patients who were given placebo. However, there was no increase in exercise duration in patients who were treated with digoxin and who had concentrations >1.2 ig/L. Other characteristics that make digoxin an ideal drug to monitor by serum drug concentration are that it has few active metabolites and most of the drug is present in unchanged form. In addition, many drugs interact with digoxin; most raise serum digoxin concentrations, frequently to the toxic range with potentially dangerous or fatal consequences [4]. For example, medications such as quinidine that are usually prescribed for the treatment of tachyarrhythmias raise serum digoxin concentrations. The digoxinlquinidine interaction can be particularly hazardous, and fatalities have been reported with this combination, particularly before this hazardous drug interaction was known. Finally, common alterations in the pharmacokinetics of digoxin are not readily assessed. For example, renal function decreases gradually with age. After age 65 years, there may be a 50% decrease in creatinine clearance; this is in turn reflected by a decrease in digoxin clearance. Because muscle mass decreases with aging and less creatinine is released from muscle, the serum creatinine may not reflect the decrease in renal function [5]. Because digoxin concentrations are used to titrate digoxin, blood should be drawn for assay after an interval that allows distribution of the drug within the body. The best time to obtain a serum concentration is 6-12 h after the drug is given orally and >4 h after the last intravenous dose [6]. In interpreting Table 2. CharacteristIcs of ideal drug to monitor by serum drug concentration. Narrow therapeutic-to-toxic dose ratio Toxicity: serious or fatal Good correlation between serum concentration and effect Clinical effect not readily measurable Few active metabolites Myriad of drug interactions8 Factors that influence pharmacokinetics not easily assessed Accurate, specific drug assay Forexample,digoxinserum concentrations are increased by the antiarrhythmic drugs amiodarone, propafenone, quinidine, and verapamil. 1313 digoxin concentrations one must be aware that cross-reactivity with digoxin-like materials and digoxin metabolites may interfere with the accuracy of the serum digoxin assay. The most common error in interpreting the digoxin concentration is failure to recognize that the concentrations may be 2-3 times that at equilibrium if the blood is drawn 1-2 h after an oral dose of digoxin. ANTICOAGULANTS A pharmacodynamic assay of warfarin is essential for dosing. The mechanism of action of warfarin is that it interferes with the formation of vitamin K-dependent clotting factors, including prothrombin. It is completely absorbed, highly bound to plasma albumin, and metabolized by hepatic microsomes with a t112 of 37 h. Approximately 80 drugs reportedly interact with warfarin; most of them cause an enhanced effect of warfarin. These drugs include antibiotics such as metronidazole (Flagyl#{174}) and tnmethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim#{174}) as well as antiarrhythmics such as amiodarone and propafenone. Prothrombin time, used to titrate the drug, is obtained by observing the time to clot formation when calcium and thromboplastin are added to citrated plasma. The patient’s prothrombin time is compared with a mean/normal prothrombin time obtained from plasma from 20 healthy individuals. The potency of thromboplastin can vary widely. It is now standardized and is expressed as the international sensitivity index, or ISI. When the prothrombin ratio is raised to the power of the ISI, one obtains an international normalized ratio, or 1NR: INR = (Patient’s prothrombin time/Control prothrombin time)ISI. Warfarin is prescribed for the treatment of deep venous thrombosis, to prevent emboli from forming on mechanical heart valves and in the atria of patients with atrial fibrillation. These clots can become dislodged and cause strokes. Before treatment with warfann of patients with atrial fibrillation, this arrhythmia was a major cause of stroke. Several trials involving thousands of patients with atrial fibrillation have been conducted to answer the question of the optimal dose and effect of warfarin measured by the prothrombin time. The aim is to provide the greatest protection against stroke with the lowest rate of severe bleeding complications, which are defined as bleeding that requires hospitalization or causes a cerebral hemorrhage. This dose has now been established as an INIR of 2-3 /7]. However, the question of whether all patients with atrial fibrillation should be treated with warfarin is still unresolved. The annual risk of bleeding is 1.7% in patients with atnial fibrillation who are treated with warfarin; in atrial fibrillation patients who are at low risk, the annual stroke rate is 1% (A low-risk patient is defined as younger than 65, with no diabetes, high blood pressure, or a history of embolic stroke. Therefore, the use of warfarin in this low-risk group may not be warranted. In patients age 75 years who have at least one of the abovementioned risk factors, the annual stroke rate is 8.1%; however, the risk of severe bleeding also is increased. Therefore, studies to determine the optimal 1NR and (or) combination of antithrombotic agents are continuing. An 1NR of 2-3 is recommended for the treatment of patients with deep venous throm- 1314 Marcus: bosis [8], and 2.5-3.5 is the mechanical heart valves [9]. optimal INR Titrating for patients with cardiovascular drugs diameter of the extramural coronary vessels and can decrease myocardial oxygen demand by lowering systemic pressure. ANTILIPEMICS CARDIOVASCULAR Serum lipids, particularly high concentrations of total cholesterol and HDL cholesterol, are a major risk factor for myocardial infarction and cardiovascular mortality [10]. Coronary heart disease can be prevented by lowering the total serum cholesterol with lipid-lowering drugs such as the 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitors. In a recent study there was a 31 % relative risk reduction of nonfatal myocardial infarction or death from coronary heart disease in the treated group compared with those who received placebos [Ii]. Reductions were similar for the risks of nonfatal myocardial infarction as well as death from all cardiovascular causes. Plasma cholesterol was 20% lower in the treated group than in patients who received placebos, and LDL concentrations were reduced 26%. The goal of antilipemic therapy in patients with coronary LIMITED CLINICAL DRUGS VALUE FOR WHICH SERUM ASSAY the IS OF IN TITRATION pressure (<140/90 mmHg is usually a goal of therapy). Some antihypertensive drugs have multiple actions. This is particularly true of beta blockers, which can cause bradycardia; this may require discontinuation of the drug or a decrease in dose. If a drug lowers blood pressure but causes adverse side effects, it may be necessary to decrease the dose. The desired effect may persist, but the adverse effects can diminish or become tolerable. For example, decreasing the dose of beta blockers may ameliorate or eliminate fatigue, lethargy, and impotence. Cardiovascular drugs such as verapamil, diltiazem, and beta blockers may be used to decrease the rate response of the ventricle to the rapid rate of the atrium in patients who have atrial fibrillation. Again, one can assess this effect clinically by measuring the pulse. Although the major goal of therapy may be to decrease the rate, the therapeutic end point may not be achieved because of the other actions of the drug, such as bradycardia and hypotension. The response to diuretics in patients with congestive heart failure is readily assessed by the increase in urine output, or it may be determined by a rapid decrease in weight over hours or days that reflects diuretic-produced fluid loss. These findings For some cardiovascular drugs, a broad range of serum concentrations is associated with therapeutic or adverse effects. In addition, active metabolites may not be routinely measured, or, if assayed, their therapeutic roles may be unclear. An example of the wide range of therapeutic serum concentrations associated with a therapeutic effect was given in a study by Giardina et al. [13]. Thirty-three patients with heart disease who had >10 premature ventricular beats per hour were treated with 3 g of procainamide per day. The dose was increased daily by 1.5 g until the daily dose was 7.5 g. Twenty-two patients had arrhythmia suppression (defined as >75% decrease in premature ventricular beat frequency). Serum procainamide concentrations associated with the therapeutic effect were 1.8-17.0 mg/L. In the patients who were effectively treated, the serum concentration of the major metabolite, N-acetylprocainamide, had a similar wide range of 1.8-25.2 mgfL. The attainment of “therapeutic” serum procainamide concentrations does not ensure clinically effective arrhythmia suppression. In another study, Waxman et al. administered procainamide to 126 patients who had sustained ventricular arrhythmias induced by inserting a catheter into the right ventricle and stimulating the heart. Most patients received the drug intravenously at a dose of 1-2.5 g followed by a constant infusion. The efficacy of the drug was assessed by the inability to stimulate the abnormal rhythm electrically in these patients after procainamide was administered. The serum concentrations of procainamide were 13.8 ± 6 mg/L in the patients who were still inducible and 12.2 ± 5 mg/L in the patients who were not inducible, not significantly different [14]. Why then measure serum concentration of antiarrhythmic drugs such as procainamide? When treating patients with such drugs, the serum concentration provides information that the dose administered results in serum concentrations below, within, or above the range usually associated with a therapeutic effect. The reasons for the poor correlation between measured values in serum with clinical effects of antiarrhythmic drugs are probably related to variations in the arrhythmia circuits for reentrant arrhythmias, the changing myocardial substrate over time, and the effects of alterations of autonomic tone on the arrhythmia. For example, an increase in sympathetic tone can alter the conduction time and refractoriness of the arrhythmia reentrant circuit so that a drug that may be effective in preventing an arrhythmia during dominant vagal tone may be completely ineffective during exercise or excitement. A related issue in titrating antiarrhythmic drugs is the are usually reflected by a decrease in the signs and symptoms of heart failure. Coronary vasodilators such as nitroglycerin immediately relieve angina pectonis, which is due to a discrepancy between myocardial oxygen demand caused by excitement or exercise and the inability of the coronary circulation to satisfy that demand. Coronary vasodilators increase blood flow by increasing the convential wisdom that one could assess efficacy of antiarrhythmic drugs for treatment of serious arrhythmias by surrogate end points. For example, it has been the practice to give antiarrhythmic drugs in sufficient doses to suppress the premature ventricular beats, as recorded by 24-h ambulatory electrocardiographic monitor. This was thought to predict the efficacy of the drugs in preventing recurrent sustained serious ventricular arrhythmias disease is to decrease the serum cholesterol to <5.17 mmolJL (<200 mg/dL) and to decrease the LDL concentration to <2.86 mmollL (<100 mg/dL) [12]. Because the response of the individual patient to therapy with antilipemic agents varies, measuring serum lipids is essential to titrating these drugs. CARDIOVASCULAR DRUGS TITRATED BY CLINICAL EFFECT Many cardiovascular drugs can be measured simply by their responses to the primary actions of the drugs. For example, antihypertensive agents are easily titrated by measuring blood Clinical Chemistrj such as ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation. Other clinicians have used the technique described above of inducing the sustained arrhythmia in the electrophysiological laboratory and testing antiarrhythmic drugs serially until one is found that prevents the induction of the arrhythmia. Although a recently published study (Electrophysiological Study vs Electrocardiographic Monitoring trial) found that these two methods have equal predictive value, the efficacy of both methods is not impressive because 60% of patients who were predicted to be effectively treated by either method had recurrence of the arrhythmias within 4 years [15]. Another clinical trial showed that patients who had frequent premature ventricular beats after a myocardial infarction and who were randomized to treatment with one of several antiarrhythmic drugs to suppress their premature ventricular beats during 24-h ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring actually had a higher mortality rate than the placebo-treated patients [16]. These studies have resulted in an awareness that surrogate end points for evaluating the efficacy of antiarrhythmic drugs are not valid [17]. Consequently, there is an appropriate reluctance to prescribe antiarrhythmic drugs. For these reasons nonpharmacological methods of treatment such as automatic implanted cardioverter defibrillators are being used more frequently to treat serious ventricular arrhythmias. In summary, some cardiovascular drugs can be titrated best by assay of serum concentration, some by laboratory assessment of effect, and others by clinical efficacy. Large-scale multicenter therapeutic trials have greatly enhanced knowledge of the indications, benefits, and risks as well as appropriate dose or serum concentration of specific 42, No. 8(B), 1996 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. drugs or therapy. 14. I am grateful manuscript preparation to Paul Nolan and to Pam Abrams of the manuscript. for his critical review of the and Risa O’Connor for help in 15. accepted guidelines for a therapeutic serum level of the drug. JAm CoIl Cardiol 1993;21:378A. Marcus Fl. In: Singh BN, Dzau VJ, Vanhoutte PM, Woosley RL, eds. Digitalis in cardiovascular pharmacology and therapeutics. New York: Churchill-Livingston, 1994:343-51. Ewy GA, Yau L, Lullian M, Marcus Fl. Digoxin metabolism in the elderly. Circulation 1969;39:449-53. Howanitz PJ, Steindel SJ. Digoxin therapeutic drug monitoring practices. Arch Pathol Lab Med 1993;117:684-90. Laupacis A, Albers GW, Dalen JE, Dunn Ml, Feinberg WAM, Jacobson AK. Antithrombic therapy in atrial fibrillation. Chest 1995;108(Suppl)4:352S-9S. Clagett GP, Anderson FA Jr, Heit J, Levine M, Wheeler HB. Prevention of venous thromboembolism. Chest 1995; 108(Suppl)4:312S-345. Stein PD, Alpert JS, Copeland JG, Dalen JE, Goldman S, Turpie AGG. Antithrombotic therapy in patients with mechanical and biological prosthetic heart valves. Chest 1995;108(Suppl)4: 371S-9S. Stamler J, Wentworth 0, Neaton J. Is the relation between serum cholesterol and risk of death from CHD continuous and graded? JAMA 1986;256:2823-8. Shepherd J, Cobb SM, Ford I, Isles CG, LorimerAR, Macfarline PW, et al., for the West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study Group. Prevention of coronary heart disease with pravastatin in men with hypercholesterolemia. N EngI J Med 1995;333:1301-7. Adult Treatment Panel II, expert panel on detection, evaluation, and treatment of high blood cholesterol in adults. Summary of the Second Report of the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP). JAMA 1993;269:3015-23. Giardina EGV, Fenster PE, Bigger JT Jr, Mayersohn M, Perrier 0, Marcus Fl. Efficacy, plasma concentrations and adverse effects of a new sustained release procainamide preparation. Am J Cardiol 1980;46:855-62. Waxman HL, Buxton AE, Sadowski LM, Josephson ME. The response to procainamide during electrophysiologic study for sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmias predicts the response to other medications. Circulation 1983;67:30-7. Mason JW, for the Electrophysiological Study versus Electrocardiographic Monitoring Investigators. A comparison of electrophysiologic testing References i. withering w. An account of the foxglove and some of its medical uses. London: Robinson, 1775:186-207. 2. Smith 1W, Butler VP Jr, Haber E. Determination of therapeutic and toxic serum digoxin concentrations by immunoassay. N Engl J Med 1969;281:1212-7. 3. Young JB, Gheorghiade M, Packer M, Uretsky B, Hull H, on behalf of the Proved and Radiance Investigators. Are low serum levels of digoxin effective in chronic heart failure? Evidence challenging the 1315 with holter monitoring to predict antiarrhythmic-drug efficacy for ventricular tachyarrhythmias. N EngI J Med 1993;329: 445-51. 16. Cardiac Arrhythmia Suppression Trial (CAST) Investigators preliminary report: effect of encainide and flecainide on mortality in a randomized trial of arrhythmia suppression after myocardial infarction. N EngI J Med 1989;21:406-12. 17. Singh BN. Antiarrhythmic therapy of ventricular arrhythmias: the contemporary dilemma. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol Ther 1996;1: 3-8.