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Carbamazepine Increases the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Arrest by a Reduction of the Cardiac Sodium Current

Lixia Jia, Talip E Eroglu, Ronald Wilders, Arie O. Verkerk, Hanno L. Tan

2022Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aim: To assess the risk of sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) associated with the use of carbamazepine (CBZ) and establish the possible underlying cellular electrophysiological mechanisms. Methods: The SCA risk association with CBZ was studied in general population cohorts using a case–control design ( n = 5,473 SCA cases, 21,866 non-SCA controls). Effects of 1–100 µM CBZ on action potentials (APs) and individual membrane currents were determined in isolated rabbit and human cardiomyocytes using the patch clamp technique. Results: CBZ use was associated with increased risk of SCA compared with no use (adjusted odds ratio 1.90 [95% confidence interval: 1.12–3.24]). CBZ reduced the AP upstroke velocity of rabbit and human cardiomyocytes, without prominent changes in other AP parameters. The reduction occurred at ≥30 µM and was frequency-dependent with a more pronounced reduction at high stimulus frequencies. The cardiac sodium current (I Na ) was reduced at ≥30 μM; this was accompanied by a hyperpolarizing shift in the voltage-dependency of inactivation. The recovery from inactivation was slower, which is consistent with the more pronounced AP upstroke velocity reduction at high stimulus frequencies. The main cardiac K + and Ca 2+ currents were unaffected, except reduction of L-type Ca 2+ current by 100 µM CBZ. Conclusion: CBZ use is associated with an increased risk of SCA in the general population. At concentrations of 30 µM and above, CBZ reduces AP upstroke velocity and I Na in cardiomyocytes. Since the concentration of 30 µM is well within the therapeutic range (20–40 µM), we conclude that CBZ increases the risk of SCA by a reduction of the cardiac I Na .

Topics & Concepts

Internal medicinePopulationSudden cardiac deathSodium channelElectrophysiologyCardiologyCarbamazepineConfidence intervalOdds ratioSodium channel blockerMedicineAnesthesiaChemistrySodiumPharmacologyEndocrinologyEpilepsyPsychiatryEnvironmental healthOrganic chemistryCardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmiasIon channel regulation and functionNeuroscience and Neural Engineering