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HelixTalk - Rosalind Franklin University's College of Pharmacy Podcast

165 - QT and the Beast: Managing Medications That Prolong the QT Interval

HelixTalk - Rosalind Franklin University's College of Pharmacy Podcast

Sean P. Kane, PharmD, BCPS

Health & Fitness, Medications, Rosalindfranklin, Rfums, Pharmacy, Pharmd, Pharmacist, Medicine, Drugs

5644 Ratings

🗓️ 16 May 2023

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, we discuss the concerns of QTc prolongation, which can cause a fatal arrhythmia called torsades de pointes (TdP). We cover the difference between QT and QTc, how to interpret a QTc (and when it is inaccurate), common medications that prolong QTc, and how pharmacists can evaluate the risk of QTc/TdP in patients who are receiving QTc-prolonging therapies.

Key Concepts

  1. The QTc interval is the QT interval that has been “corrected” for heart rate. In nearly all cases, when describing a QT interval, it should be expressed as the QTc.
  2. Although a prolonged QTc is usually defined as a QTc exceeding 450-480 msec, the risk of torsades de pointes (TdP) begins to become concerning when the QTc is more than 500 msec, 15-20% longer than baseline, or if the QTc has increased by more than 60 msec.
  3. Vaughan-Williams Class III antiarrhythmics are most implicated in QTc prolongation and TdP risk. These therapies include sotalol, dofetilide, and dronedarone. Although amiodarone is a class III antiarrhythmic, its risk of TdP is quite low despite the fact that it often substantially prolongs the QTc.
  4. When pharmacists are assessing the risk of QTc prolongation and TdP, multiple factors (not just the QTc itself) should be considered. Risk scores, like the Tisdale Risk Score, as well as considering the risks/benefits of switching drug therapy, should be evaluated.

References

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Helix Talk, an educational podcast for healthcare students and providers covering real-life clinical pearls, professional pharmacy topics, and drug therapy discussions.

0:11.0

This podcast is provided by pharmacists and faculty members at Rosal Franklin University College of Pharmacy.

0:17.0

This podcast contains general information for educational purposes only. This is not professional

0:22.4

advice and should not be used in lieu of obtaining advice from a qualified health care provider.

0:27.2

And now on to the show.

0:31.4

Welcome to Helix Talk episode 165. I'm your co-host Dr. Kane. And I'm Dr. Patal.

0:39.9

And the title of today's episode is QD and the Beast, Managing Medications at Prolonging the QT Interval. And Dr. Patel, today we're

0:46.4

obviously talking about QTC prolongation and really how the typical clinician can evaluate

0:52.6

whenever a patient is at risk for QT prolongation,

0:55.7

what that actually means, and how to manage those kinds of adverse drug reactions or drug

1:01.1

interactions.

1:01.8

And I'm sure we see this all the time in practice, especially for us pharmacists, there

1:07.8

is that drug, drug interactions popping up saying, hey, this drug

1:11.2

increases QT risk, or I'm sure on the prescribing side, that flag goes up in Epic, which is a lot

1:18.2

of the time ignored or consulted to a pharmacist saying, what do I do? Absolutely. And Dr. Patel,

1:23.8

I just want to mention that this was actually a listener requested episode.

1:31.7

So for the listener, if you have any episode topics that you'd like us to cover, you can reach out to us.

1:33.0

Our contact info is at helixtalk.com.

1:35.8

And related to the website, because of kind of a university pause on the website right now,

1:39.9

we actually can't update it until July.

1:42.0

So we'll still release our episodes, and the show notes are actually in the episode description

1:46.1

in your podcast app.

...

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