Haissaguerre M, Warin J F, Benchimol D, Le Métayer P, Regaudie J J, Blanchot P
Arch Mal Coeur Vaiss. 1987 Mar;80(3):357-63.
Oral flecainide was administered to 98 patients with arrhythmias regarded as resistant to other antiarrhythmic agents: quinidines (82), propafenone (40), beta-blockers (30), amiodarone alone (38) or combined with a class I compound (19). Therapeutic effectiveness was assessed on clinical date, repeated Holter recordings (64 patients), exercise tests (8) and electrophysiological exploration (15). Mean follow-up was 11.7 +/- 11 months; the patients treated have now been followed up for 18.2 +/- 12 months (range: 7-58 months). Fifty-three patients had atrial arrhythmia (fibrillation or flutter in 45, atrial tachycardia in 8). Flecainide was effective in 26 patients (49%) and ineffective in 27 (51%). There was no significant difference in dosage between these 2 groups: 231 +/- 62 mg/day and 265 +/- 61 mg/day respectively. Paroxysms of re-entrant junctional tachycardia were controlled in 6 of the 8 cases observed. Eleven patients presented with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome: treatment was successful in the 3 patients with atrial fibrillation and in 8 of the 10 patients with orthodromic reciprocating rhythms. Among 30 patients with episodes of ventricular tachycardia, 9 (30%) responded to flecainide and 21 (70%) failed to respond. Flecainide reduced the repetitive forms by more than 90% in 7/15 patients and suppressed exercise-induced ventricular tachycardia in 2/8 patients. Fifteen out of 18 patients had ventricular tachycardia reproducible by programmed stimulation; under flecainide, the ventricular tachycardia spontaneously recurred in 4 cases, was provoked by stimulation in 5 other cases, was more easily inducible in 3 cases and was not inducible in a sustained manner in the last 3 cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)