American Journal of Cardiology
Volume 102, Issue 6, Supplement , Pages 12H-19H, 22 September 2008

New Horizons in Antiarrhythmic Therapy: Will Novel Agents Overcome Current Deficits?

Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Main Line Health Heart Center, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, USA; and Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

Pharmacologic antiarrhythmic therapy is the most commonly used treatment in most patients with atrial fibrillation (AF), but currently available agents are limited by risks that may offset the benefits of sinus rhythm. The development of antiarrhythmic agents with the potential for fewer adverse ventricular effects and less extracardiac toxicity is a primary aim of current investigations. At present, pharmacologic research is actively focused on developing antiarrhythmic agents with multiple or novel ion channel effects. There are 4 agents that act by simultaneously blocking multiple ion channels that are currently under regulatory review: azimilide dihydrochloride, tedisamil, dronedarone, and vernakalant (RSD-1235). In addition, agents with mechanisms of action that differ from those of existing agents (eg, gap junction modulators) are under review, as is the use of nonantiarrhythmic agents (eg, renin–angiotensin system antagonists, statins, n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids) to alter the cardiac substrate and suppress AF in some patient subtypes.

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 Statement of author disclosure: Please see the Author Disclosures section at the end of this article.

PII: S0002-9149(08)01081-3

doi:10.1016/j.amjcard.2008.06.025

American Journal of Cardiology
Volume 102, Issue 6, Supplement , Pages 12H-19H, 22 September 2008