Oates Institute for Experimental Therapeutics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232-0575, USA.
Pharmacol Rev. 2010 Dec;62(4):760-81. doi: 10.1124/pr.110.003723.
The drug-induced long QT syndrome is a distinct clinical entity that has evolved from an electrophysiologic curiosity to a centerpiece in drug regulation and development. This evolution reflects an increasing recognition that a rare adverse drug effect can profoundly upset the balance between benefit and risk that goes into the prescription of a drug by an individual practitioner as well as the approval of a new drug entity by a regulatory agency. This review will outline how defining the central mechanism, block of the cardiac delayed-rectifier potassium current I(Kr), has contributed to defining risk in patients and in populations. Models for studying risk, and understanding the way in which clinical risk factors modulate cardiac repolarization at the molecular level are discussed. Finally, the role of genetic variants in modulating risk is described.
药物引起的长 QT 综合征是一种独特的临床实体,它已经从电生理上的好奇心发展成为药物监管和开发的核心。这种演变反映出人们越来越认识到,一种罕见的药物不良反应可能会严重打破个体医生开处方和监管机构批准新药时所考虑的药物效益与风险之间的平衡。这篇综述将概述确定心脏延迟整流钾电流 I(Kr)的中心机制是如何有助于确定患者和人群中的风险的。讨论了用于研究风险的模型以及了解临床风险因素在分子水平上如何调节心脏复极的方式。最后,还描述了遗传变异在调节风险方面的作用。