Effects of Flecainide in Patients With New <i>SCN5A</i> Mutation

Jesaia Benhorin(Bikur Cholim Hospital), Rivki Taub(Bikur Cholim Hospital), Maya Goldmit(Bikur Cholim Hospital), B. Kerem(Bikur Cholim Hospital), Robert S. Kass(Bikur Cholim Hospital), I. Windman(Bikur Cholim Hospital), Aharon Medina(Bikur Cholim Hospital)
Circulation
April 11, 2000
Cited by 198Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mutations in the cardiac sodium channel gene (SCN5A) can cause one variant of the congenital long-QT syndrome. The effects of some of these mutations on the alpha-subunit channel properties can be blocked by type Ib antiarrhythmic drugs. Recently, we have described a new SCN5A mutation (D1790G) that affects the channel properties in a manner suggesting that sodium blockers of the Ib type will be ineffective in carriers of this mutation. Hence, the ECG effects of flecainide-acetate, a type Ic sodium blocker, were evaluated in carriers of this mutation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Eight asymptomatic mutation carriers and 5 control subjects were studied. Intravenous lidocaine was tested first in only 2 mutation carriers and had no significant effect on any ECG parameter. Flecainide significantly shortened all heart rate-corrected repolarization duration parameters only in carriers and not in control subjects: QT(c) shortened by 9.5% (from 517+/-45 to 468+/-36 ms, P=0.011), and the S-offset to T-onset interval shortened by 64.7% (from 187+/-88 to 66+/-50 ms, P=0.0092). Flecainide also normalized the marked baseline repolarization dispersion in most mutation carriers. These effects among carriers were maintained during long-term (9 to 17 months) outpatient flecainide therapy with no adverse effects. CONCLUSIONS: This report is the first to describe SCN5A mutation carriers who significantly responded to flecainide therapy yet did not respond to lidocaine. These results have important implications for long-QT allele-specific therapeutic strategies.


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