- © 2004 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia seen in clinical practice, and it contributes substantially to both morbidity and medical costs.1 In this issue Humphries and associates present an analysis of antiarrhythmic drug therapy for AF based on the Canadian Registry of Atrial Fibrillation (CARAF) (see page 741).2 The authors consider the use of flecainide, quinidine, sotalol, amiodarone and propafenone, and they note that a large proportion of patients who received these antiarrhythmic drugs had conditions that constitute drug-related contraindications or warrant warnings and precautions. They suggest that the results point to a need for safer drugs, with fewer contraindications, precautions and warnings, with which to treat AF. A number of important factors need to be considered when we analyze the results of this interesting and significant study.
The CARAF trial enrolled patients whose AF was diagnosed between 1991 and 1996. The results presented by Humphries and associates were obtained at baseline and at 3-month follow-up. Thus, most of the data reflect practices in use before 1996. The precautions, warnings and contraindications for the 5 antirrhythmic drugs studied are taken from the 1996 Compendium of Pharmaceuticals and Specialties (CPS), which was published after most treatment decisions had been made. Although most of the information might have applied in earlier versions of the CPS, this does not appear to have been assessed, which presents a limitation of the analysis.
The characteristics of the patient population also need to be considered. The study was limited to patients with paroxysmal AF, for which heart-rate control is particularly difficult,3 making sinus-rhythm maintenance more often a primary objective. In addition, the vast majority of patients (83%) were symptomatic at first presentation, which further justified the use of antiarrhythmic drugs to prevent AF recurrence. Given the decision to use an antiarrhythmic drug, an examination of the list of precautions, warnings and contraindications in Table 1 of the research article2 makes it clear that the results of the survey could hardly have been otherwise. For example, heart failure, a history of myocardial infarction and concomitant digoxin use are cautioned for all 5 drugs studied, and according to Table 22 were present in 15% (at baseline), 20% (at baseline) and 46% (at 3 months) of the patient population respectively. The number of common conditions that are cautioned for each drug in Table 1 is so large that for many patients it was likely impossible to find any drug that did not involve a contraindication, warning or precaution. The authors recognize this and are careful to state that the use of antiarrhythmic agents may have reflected appropriate and judicious choices on the part of treating physicians. They note that a post hoc assessment of adverse events did not identify an association with medication use.
An additional and crucial point to consider is the changing context within which we view treatment of AF. Enrollment and data-gathering for the study by Humphries and associates were largely conducted between 1991 and 1996. The AFFIRM4 and RACE5 studies published last year demonstrated equivalent outcomes for rate and rhythm control approaches and emphasized the risks of the use of antiarrhythmic drugs for rhythm control (e.g., proarrhythmia, drug-specific adverse effects, risk of thromboembolic stroke if oral anticoagulants stopped, etc.). Radiofrequency ablation approaches to managing AF emerged in the second half of the 1990s. The strategy of atrioventricular nodal ablation and permanent pacemaking was found to produce an excellent symptomatic result in patients who are refractory to drugs, particularly those with paroxysmal AF.6 More recently, the elaboration of effective ablation procedures directed toward the pulmonary vein region of the left atrium have resulted in apparent “cure” rates of > 80%.7,8 These major developments condition how we see the results of the study by Humphries and associates but obviously could not have affected physician judgement at the time that the CARAF data were being obtained. The real question, however, is not how we judge antiarrhythmic drug use in 1991–1996 by today's standards, but what the implications of this study are for current medical practice in light of our present knowledge and capabilities.
Physicians are obviously better equipped to make decisions about AF management today than they were in the early 1990s. In the light of AFFIRM and RACE, asymptomatic patients should rarely, if ever, receive antiarrhythmic drugs for sinus rhythm maintenance. It is very likely that the follow-up study to CARAF, CARAF II,2 will show the expected tendency toward reduced antiarrhythmic drug usage in AF.
In light of the great efficacy of nonpharmacological ablation-based therapies for AF,6,7,8 one cannot help but wonder whether such invasive approaches should be situated earlier in the therapeutic decision tree for many patients. In fact, in view of the high reported cure rates for paroxysmal AF treated with catheter-based radiofrequency pulmonary vein isolation ablation,7,8this is perhaps the time for a randomized trial of ablation versus standard medical therapy as a primary approach to symptomatic patients with recurrent paroxysmal AF.
Humphries and associates mention the potential interest of new and improved antiarrhythmic drugs for AF. Certainly, drugs with fewer contraindications and greater safety would be valuable. Targeting atrial-specific ion channels and developing antiarrhythmic drugs with selected channel-blocking profiles are very attractive approaches,9,10 but their practical value and applicability for AF have yet to be confirmed. Recent developments in understanding the pathophysiology of AF make targeting the AF substrate an interesting possibility.11,12 Success in preventing components of AF pathophysiology,13,14,15,16 including the prevention of AF-promoting structural remodelling by suppressing renin–angiotensin activation,13,14 has been achieved in animal experiments. Clinical trials indicate the potential value of inhibiting angiotensin-converting enzyme17,18,19 or blocking angiotensin type-1 receptors20 in preventing AF recurrence.
The study by Humphries and associates sensitizes us to the limitations inherent in choosing currently available antiarrhythmic drugs for AF therapy. It also points to the fact that our choices for AF therapy may be much more informed and richer in 2004 than they were in 1994. There is hope for drug therapy that targets the atria without risk of adverse effects on the ventricles and that prevents AF at the level of substrate development. A serious look needs to be taken at the possibility that ablation approaches may be better choices for many patients with AF than currently available antiarrhythmic agents. One can't help but think that the best way to take that look would be in the context of a well-designed prospective randomized clinical trial.
𝛃 See related article page 741
Footnotes
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Competing interests: None declared.
References
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