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Quinaglute Warnings, Precautions, Pregnancy, Nursing, Abuse - Quinidine Gluconate
WARNINGS
Mortality:
Proarrhythmic effects: Like many other drugs (including
all other Class Ia antiarrhythmics), quinidine prolongs the QTc
interval, and this
can lead to torsades
de pointes, a life-threatening ventricular arrhythmia (see OVERDOSAGE).
The risk of torsades is increased by bradycardia,
hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia
or high serum levels of
quinidine, but it may appear in the absence
of any of these risk factors.
The best predictor of this arrhythmia
appears to be the length
of QTc interval,
and quinidine should be used with extreme care in patients who have
preexisting long-QT syndromes, who have histories of torsades
de pointes of any cause, or who have previously responded to
quinidine (or other drugs that prolong ventricular
repolarization) with marked lengthening of the QTc
interval. Estimation of the incidence
of torsades in patients with therapeutic
levels of quinidine is not possible from the available data.
Other ventricular
arrhythmias that have been reported with quinidine include frequent
extrasystoles, ventricular
tachycardia, ventricular
flutter, and ventricular fibrillation.
Paradoxical increase in ventricular
rate in atrial
flutter/fibrillation: When quinidine is administered to
patients with atrial
flutter/fibrillation, the desired pharmacologic reversion
to sinus rhythm
may (rarely) be preceded by a slowing of the atrial
rate with a consequent
increase in the rate of beats conducted to the ventricles. The resulting
ventricular rate
may be very high (greater than 200 beats per
minute) and poorly tolerated. This hazard may be decreased if partial
atrioventricular
block is achieved prior
to initiation of quinidine therapy,
using conduction-reducing drugs such as digitalis, verapamil, diltiazem,
or a B-receptor blocking
agent.
Exacerbated bradycardia
in such sinus
syndrome: In patients
with the such sinus
syndrome, quinidine
has been associated with marked sinus node
depression and bradycardia.
Pharmacokinetic considerations: Renal or hepatic
dysfunction causes the elimination
of quinidine to be slowed, while congestive heart failure causes
a reduction in quinidine's
apparent volume
of distribution. Any of these conditions can lead
to quinidine toxicity
if dosage is not appropriately
reduced. In addition, interactions
with coadministered drugs can alter the serum
concentration
and activity of quinidine,
leading either to toxicity
or to lack of efficacy
if the dose of quinidine
is not appropriately modified. (See DRUG
INTERACTIONS.)
Vagolysis: Because quinidine opposes the atrial
and A-V nodal effects of
vagal stimulation, physical
or pharmacological vagal
maneuvers undertaken to terminate paroxysmal
supraventricular
tachycardia may
be ineffective in patients receiving quinidine.
PRECAUTIONS
Heart block
In patients without implanted pacemakers who are at high
risk of complete atrioventricular
block (e.g., those with
digitalis intoxication,
second degree atrioventricular
block, or severe intraventricular
conduction defects), quinidine should be used only with caution.
Drug Interactions
Altered pharmacokinetics
of quinidine: diltiazem significantly decreases the clearance
and increases the t1/2 of quinidine, but quinidine does
not alter the kinetics
of diltiazem. Drugs that alkalinize the urine
(carbonic-anhydrase inhibitors, sodium
bicarbonate, thiazide diuretics) reduce
renal elimination
of quinidine.
By pharmacokinetic mechanisms that are not well understood, quinidine
levels are increased by coadministration
of amiodarone or cimetidine. Very rarely, and again
by mechanisms not understood, quinidine levels are decreased by
coadministration
of nifedipine.
Hepatic elimination
of quinidine may be accelerated by coadministration of drugs (phenobarbital,
phenytoin, rifampin) that induce production of cytochrome
P450IIIA4.
Perhaps because of competition
for the P450IIIA4 metabolic pathway, quinidine levels rise when
ketaconazole is coadministered.
Coadministration of propranolol usually does not affect
quinidine pharmacokinetics, but in some studies the b-blocker
appeared to cause increases
in the peak serum levels
of quinidine, decreases in quinidine's volume
of distribution, and decreases in total quinidine clearance. The
effects (if any) of coadministration
of other b-blockers on quinidine
pharmacokinetics
have not been adequately studied.
Hepatic clearance
of quinidine is significantly reduced during coadministration of
verapamil, with corresponding
increases in serum levels
and half-life.
Altered pharmacokinetics
of other drugs: Quinidine slows
the elimination of digoxin and simultaneously reduces digoxin's
apparent volume of
distribution. As a result,
serum digoxin
levels may be as much as doubled. When quinidine and digoxin
are coadministered, digoxin
doses usually need to be reduced. Serum levels of digitoxin
are also raised when
quinidine is coadministered, although the effect
appears to be smaller.
By a mechanism that
is not understood, quinidine potentiates the anticoagulatory action
of warfarin, and the anticoagulant
dosage may need
to be reduced.
Cytochrome P450IID6 is an enzyme
critical to the metabolism
of many drugs, notably including mexiletine, some phenothiazines,
and most polycyclic antidepressants. Constitutional deficiency
of cytochrome P450IID6 is found in less than 1% of Orientals, in
about 2% of American blacks, and in about 8% of American whites.
Testing with debrisoquine is sometimes used to distinguish the P450IID6-deficient
"poor metabolizers" from the majority-phenotype "extensive
metabolizers".
When drugs whose metabolism
is P450IID6-dependent are given to p.o.
metabolizers, the serum
levels achieved are higher, sometimes much higher, than the serum
levels achieved when identical
doses are given to extensive metabolizers. To obtain similar clinical
benefit without toxicity,
doses given to poor metabolizers may need
to be greatly reduced. In
the case of prodrugs whose
actions are actually mediated by P450IID6-produced metabolites (for
example, codeine and hydrocodone, whose analgesic
and antitussive effects appear to be mediated by morphine
and hydromorphone, respectively), it may not be possible to achieve
the desired clinical
benefits in poor metabolizers.
Quinidine is not metabolized by cytochrome
P450IID6, but therapeutic
serum levels of quinidine inhibit the action
of cytochrome P450IID6,
effectively converting extensive metabolizers into p.o.
metabolizers. Caution must be exercised whenever quinidine is prescribed
together with drugs metabolized by cytochrome
P450IID6.
Perhaps by competing for pathways of renal
clearance, coadministration
of quinidine causes an increase in serum
levels of procainamide.
Serum levels of haloperidol are increased when quinidine
is coadministered.
Presumably because both drugs are metabolized by cytochrome
P450IIIA4, coadministration of quinidine causes variable
slowing of the metabolism of nifedipine. Interactions with
other dihydropyridine calcium
channel blockers have not been reported, but these agents (including
felodipine, nicardipine, and nimodipine) are all dependent
upon P450IIIA4 for metabolism,
so similar interactions with quinidine should be anticipated.
Altered pharmacodynamics
of other drugs: Quinidine's anticholinergic, vasodilating,
and negative inotropic
actions may be additive
to those of other drugs with these effects, and antagonistic to
those of drugs with cholinergic, vasoconstricting, and positive
inotropic effects.
For example, when quinidine and verapamil are coadministered
in doses that are each well tolerated as monotherapy, hypotension
attributable to additive peripheral a-blockade is sometimes reported.
Quinidine potentiates the actions of depolarizing (succinylcholine,
decamethonium) and nondepolarizing (d-tubocurarine, pancuronium)
neuromuscular blocking agents. These phenomena are not well
understood, but they are observed in animal
models as well as in humans. In
addition, in vitro addition of quinidine to the serum
of pregnant women reduces
the activity of pseudocholinesterase,
an enzyme that is essential
to the metabolism
of succinylcholine.
Non-interactions of quinidine with other drugs: Quinidine
has no clinically significant
effect on the pharmacokinetics
of diltiazem, flecainide, mephenytoin, metoprolol, propafenone,
propranolol, quinine, timolol, or tocainide.
Conversely, the pharmacokinetics
of quinidine are not significantly affected by caffeine, ciprofloxacin,
digoxin, diltiazem, felodipine, omeprazole, or quinine.
Quinidine's pharmacokinetics
are also unaffected by cigarette smoking.
Information for Patients
Before prescribing QUINAGLUTE® as prophylaxis
against recurrence of atrial
fibrillation, the
physician should inform
the patient of the risks
and benefits to be expected (see CLINICAL
PHARMACOLOGY). Discussion should include the facts
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis,
Impairment of Fertility
Animal studies to evaluate quinidine's carcinogenic
or mutagenic potential have not been performed. Similarly, there
are no animal
data as to quinidine's potential
to impair fertility.
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Category C. Animal reproductive
studies have not been conducted with quinidine. There are no
adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant
women. Quinidine should be given to a pregnant
woman only if clearly
needed.
In one neonate whose
mother had received quinidine
throughout her pregnancy, the serum
level of quinidine was equal to that of the mother, with no
apparent ill effect. The level of quinidine in amniotic fluid
was about three times higher than that found in serum.
Labor and Delivery
Quinine is said to be oxytocic
in humans, but there are no
adequate data as to quinidine's effects (if any) on human
labor and delivery.
Nursing Mothers
Quinidine is present
in human milk
at levels slightly lower than those in maternal
serum; a human infant
ingesting such milk
should (scaling directly by weight) be expected to develop serum
quinidine levels at least an order
of magnitude lower
than those of the mother. On the other hand, the pharmacokinetics
and pharmacodynamics
of quinidine in human
infants have not been adequately studied, and neonates' reduced
protein binding of quinidine
may increase their risk
of toxicity at low
total serum levels. Administration
of quinidine should (if possible) be avoided in lactating women
who continue to nurse.
Geriatric Use
Safety and efficacy
of quinidine in elderly patients have not been systematically studied.
Pediatric Use
In antimalarial
trials, quinidine was as safe and effective in pediatric patients
as in adults. Notwithstanding the known pharmacokinetic differences
between children and adults (see CLINICAL
PHARMACOLOGY: Pharmacokinetics and Metabolism), children
in these trials received the same doses (on a mg/kg basis) as adults.
Safety and effectiveness
of antiarrhythmic
use in children have not been established.
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