Abstract
Risperidone is a second-generation antipsychotic for treating schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. It can potently inhibit IKr, but is classified into conditional risk for torsade de pointes (TdP) by CredibleMeds®. Our previous studies using chronic atrioventricular block dogs showed that risperidone alone did not induce TdP, and that dl-sotalol (β-adrenoceptor blockade plus IKr inhibition) induced TdP three times more frequently than d-sotalol (IKr inhibition alone). Since risperidone can block α1-adrenoceptor and decrease blood pressure, the resulting reflex-mediated increase of sympathetic tone on β-adrenoceptor might protect the heart from its IKr inhibition-associated TdP. To validate this hypothesis, risperidone was administered to chronic atrioventricular block dogs after β-adrenoceptor blocker atenolol infusion with monitoring J-Tpeak and Tpeak-Tend, which are proarrhythmic surrogate markers of "substrate" and "trigger" toward TdP, respectively. Atenolol alone induced TdP in 1 out of 5 dogs; moreover, an additional infusion of risperidone induced TdP in 3 out of 4 dogs. Risperidone prolonged QT interval, J-Tpeak and Tpeak-Tend in animals that induced TdP. These findings indicate that β-adrenoceptor blockade can diminish repolarization reserve to augment risperidone’s torsadogenic potential, thus advising caution when using β-adrenoceptor blockers in patients with IKr inhibition-linked labile repolarization.
Published Version
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