Chow M S, Lebsack C, Hilleman D
Department of Pharmacy Services, Hartford Hospital, CT 06115.
Clin Pharm. 1988 Dec;7(12):869-77.
The chemical and pharmacologic properties, pharmacokinetics, drug interactions, clinical efficacy, adverse effects, and dosage of propafenone are reviewed. Propafenone is a class IC antiarrhythmic agent that is structurally similar to the beta blockers but that has only weak beta-blocking and calcium-channel-blocking activity. It is well absorbed after oral administration, but systemic bioavailability is only 12% after a 300-mg dose. Among extensive metabolizers (greater than 90% of the United States population), bioavailability seems to vary nonlinearly with dose and increases substantially with food; these effects are not seen in poor metabolizers. Elimination is primarily hepatic, with a mean elimination half-life after oral administration of 5.5 hours in extensive metabolizers and 17.2 hours in poor metabolizers. The relationship between plasma propafenone concentration and clinical response varies considerably among individual patients; therefore, plasma concentrations have limited usefulness in predicting efficacy or electrophysiologic effects. Propafenone is effective in treating ventricular tachycardia and in suppressing premature ventricular complexes (PVCs). It is less effective in the treatment of refractory ventricular tachycardia. Concurrent administration of digoxin, warfarin, or metoprolol with propafenone has been shown to increase the serum concentrations of those three drugs, while cimetidine slightly increases the propafenone concentrations. Additive pharmacologic effect can occur when lidocaine, procainamide, and quinidine are combined with propafenone. Overall, 21% to 32% of patients experience adverse effects, with 3% to 7% of these serious enough to warrant discontinuing therapy. The most common adverse effects are dizziness or lightheadedness, metallic taste, and nausea and vomiting; the most serious adverse effects are proarrhythmic events.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
本文综述了普罗帕酮的化学和药理特性、药代动力学、药物相互作用、临床疗效、不良反应及剂量。普罗帕酮是一种IC类抗心律失常药物,其结构与β受体阻滞剂相似,但仅具有微弱的β受体阻滞和钙通道阻滞活性。口服后吸收良好,但300mg剂量后的全身生物利用度仅为12%。在广泛代谢者(占美国人口的90%以上)中,生物利用度似乎随剂量呈非线性变化,且随食物摄入显著增加;在慢代谢者中未观察到这些效应。消除主要通过肝脏进行,广泛代谢者口服后的平均消除半衰期为5.5小时,慢代谢者为17.2小时。普罗帕酮血浆浓度与临床反应之间的关系在个体患者中差异很大;因此,血浆浓度在预测疗效或电生理效应方面的作用有限。普罗帕酮对治疗室性心动过速和抑制室性早搏有效。它在治疗难治性室性心动过速方面效果较差。已证明地高辛、华法林或美托洛尔与普罗帕酮同时给药会增加这三种药物的血清浓度,而西咪替丁会略微增加普罗帕酮的浓度。利多卡因、普鲁卡因胺和奎尼丁与普罗帕酮合用时可能会产生相加的药理作用。总体而言,21%至32%的患者会出现不良反应,其中3%至7%严重到足以停药。最常见的不良反应是头晕或眩晕、金属味、恶心和呕吐;最严重的不良反应是促心律失常事件。(摘要截取自250字)