Quantitative Comparison of Effects of Dofetilide, Sotalol, Quinidine, and Verapamil between Human Ex vivo Trabeculae and In silico Ventricular Models Incorporating Inter-Individual Action Potential Variability

被引:40
|
作者
Britton, Oliver J. [1 ]
Abi-Gerges, Najah [2 ]
Page, Guy [2 ]
Ghetti, Andre [2 ]
Miller, Paul E. [2 ]
Rodriguez, Blanca [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Dept Comp Sci, Oxford, England
[2] AnaBios Corp, San Diego, CA USA
来源
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY | 2017年 / 8卷
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会; 英国国家替代、减少和改良动物研究中心; 英国惠康基金;
关键词
safety pharmacology; dofetilide; sotalol; quinidine; verapamil; cardiac modeling; QT INTERVAL PROLONGATION; REPOLARIZATION; PROARRHYTHMIA; DURATION; DRUGS; BLOCK; POPULATION; EXPRESSION; PREDICTION; MECHANISM;
D O I
10.3389/fphys.2017.00597
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
Background: Insilico modeling could soon become a mainstream method of pro-arrhythmic risk assessment in drug development. However, a lack of human-specific data and appropriate modeling techniques has previously prevented quantitative comparison of drug effects between insilico models and recordings from human cardiac preparations. Here, we directly compare changes in repolarization biomarkers caused by dofetilide, dl-sotalol, quinidine, and verapamil, between insilico populations of human ventricular cell models and ex vivo human ventricular trabeculae. Methods and Results: Ex vivo recordings from human ventricular trabeculae in control conditions were used to develop populations of insilico human ventricular cell models that integrated intra-and inter-individual variability in action potential (AP) biomarker values. Models were based on the O'Hara-Rudy ventricular cardiomyocyte model, but integrated experimental AP variability through variation in underlying ionic conductances. Changes to AP duration, triangulation and early after-depolarization occurrence from application of the four drugs at multiple concentrations and pacing frequencies were compared between simulations and experiments. To assess the impact of variability in IC50 measurements, and the effects of including state-dependent drug binding dynamics, each drug simulation was repeated with two different IC50 datasets, and with both the original O'Hara-Rudy hERG model and a recently published state-dependent model of hERG and hERG block. For the selective hERG blockers dofetilide and sotalol, simulation predictions of AP prolongation and repolarization abnormality occurrence showed overall good agreement with experiments. However, for multichannel blockers quinidine and verapamil, simulations were not in agreement with experiments across all IC50 datasets and I-Kr block models tested. Quinidine simulations resulted in overprolonged APs and high incidence of repolarization abnormalities, which were not observed in experiments. Verapamil simulations showed substantial AP prolongation while experiments showed mild AP shortening. Conclusions: Results for dofetilide and sotalol show good agreement between experiments and simulations for selective compounds, however lack of agreement from simulations of quinidine and verapamil suggest further work is needed to understand the more complex electrophysiological effects of these multichannel blocking drugs.
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页数:19
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