CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Pharmacokinetics
The absolute bioavailability of quinidine from quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) is about 70%,
but this varies widely (45-100%) between patients. The less-than-complete bioavailability
is the result of first-pass metabolism in the liver. Peak serum levels generally
appear about 6 hours after dosing. Although the effect of food upon quinidine
sulfate absorption has not been studied, peak serum quinidine levels obtained
from immediate-release quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) are known to be delayed by nearly an
hour (without change in total absorption) when these products are taken with
food. The volume of distribution of quinidine is 2 to 3 L/kg in healthy
young adults, but this may be reduced to as little as 0.5 L/kg in patients with
congestive heart failure, or increased to 3 to 5 L/kg in patients with cirrhosis
of the liver. At concentrations of 2 to 5 mg/L (6.5 to 16.2 µmol/L), the fraction
of quinidine bound to plasma proteins (mainly to &alpha1;-acid glycoprotein and to
albumin) is 80 to 88% in adults and older pediatric patients, but it is lower
in pregnant women, and in infants and neonates it may be as low as 50 to 70%.
Because α1acid glycoprotein levels are increased in response to stress, serum
levels of total quinidine may be greatly increased in settings such as acute
myocardial infarction, even though the serum content of unbound (active) drug
may remain normal. Protein binding is also increased in chronic renal failure,
but binding abruptly descends toward or below normal when heparin is administered
for hemodialysis.
Quinidine clearance typically proceeds at 3 to 5 mL/min/kg in adults,
but clearance in pediatric patients may be twice or three times as rapid. The
elimination half-life is 6 to 8 hours in adults and 3 to 4 hours in pediatric
patients. Quinidine clearance is unaffected by hepatic cirrhosis, so the increased
volume of distribution seen in cirrhosis leads to a proportionate increase in
the elimination half-life.
Most quinidine is eliminated hepatically via the action of cytochrome P450MIA4;
there are several different hydroxylated metabolites, and some of these have
antiarrhythmic activity.
The most important of quinidine's metabolites is 3-hydroxy-quinidine (3HQ), serum levels of which can approach those of quinidine in patients receiving conventional doses of quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) . The volume of distribution of 3HQ appears to be larger than that of quinidine, and the elimination half-life of 3HQ is about 12 hours.
As measured by antiarrhythmic effects in animals, by QTC prolongation
in human volunteers, or by various in vitro techniques, 3HQ has at least
half the antiarrhythmic activity of the parent compound, so it may be responsible
for a substantial fraction of the effect of quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate (quinidine sulfate tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) tablet, film coated, extended release) in chronic use.
When the urine pH is less than 7, about 20% of administered quinidine appears unchanged in the urine, but this fraction drops to as little as 5% when the urine is more alkaline. Renal clearance involves both glomerular filtration and active tubular secretion, moderated by (pH-dependent) tubular reabsorption. The net renal clearance is about 1 mL/min/kg in healthy adults.
When renal function is taken into account, quinidine clearance is apparently independent of patient age.
Assays of serum quinidine levels are widely available, but the results
of modern assays may not be consistent with results cited in the older medical
literature. The serum levels of quinidine cited in this package insert are those
derived from specific assays, using either benzene extraction or (preferably)
reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography. In matched samples, older
assays might unpredictably have given results that were as much as two or three
times higher. A typical "therapeutic" concentration range is 2 to
6 mg/L (6.2 to 18.5 umol/L).
Mechanisms of Action
In patients with malaria, quinidine acts primarily as an intra-erythrocytic
schizonticide, with little effect upon sporozites or upon pre-erythrocytic parasites.
Quinidine is gametocidal to Plasmodium vivax and P.malariae, but
not to P. falciparum.
In cardiac muscle and in Purkinje fibers, quinidine depresses the rapid inward
depolarizing sodium current, thereby slowing phase-0 depolarization and reducing
the amplitude of the action potential without affecting the resting potential.
In normal Purkinje fibers, it reduces the slope of phase-4 depolarization, shifting
the threshold voltage upward toward zero. The result is slowed conduction and
reduced automaticity in all parts of the heart, with increase of the effective
refractory period relative to the duration of the action potential in the atria,
ventricles, and Purkinje tissues. Quinidine also raises the fibrillation thresholds
of the atria and ventricles, and it raises the ventricular (defibrillation threshold as well. Quinidine's actions fall into Class la in the Vaughan-Williams classification.
By slowing conduction and prolonging the effective refractory period, quinidine can interrupt or prevent reentrant arrhythmias and arrhythmias due to increased automaticity, including atrial flutter, atrial fibrillation, and paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia.
In patients with the sick sinus syndrome, quinidine can cause marked sinus node depression and bradycardia. In most patients, however, use of quinidine is associated with an increase in the sinus rate.
Quinidine prolongs the QT interval in a dose-related fashion. This may lead
to increased ventricular automaticity and polymorphic ventricular tachycardias,
including torsades depointes (see WARNINGS).
In addition, quinidine has anticholinergic activity, it has negative inotropic activity, and it acts peripherally as an a-adrenergic antagonist (that is, as a vasodilator).
Clinical Effects
Maintenance of sinus rhythm after conversion from atrial fibrillation
In six clinical trials (published between 1970 and 1984) with a total of 808 patients, quinidine (418 patients) was compared to nontreatment (258 patients) or placebo (132 patients) for the maintenance of sinus rhythm after cardioversion from chronic atrial fibrillation. Quinidine was consistently more efficacious in maintaining sinus rhythm, but a meta-analysis found that mortality in the quinidine-exposed patients (2.9%) was significantly greater than mortality in the patients who had not been treated with active drug (0.8%). Suppression of atrial fibrillation with quinidine has theoretical patient benefits (e.g., improved exercise tolerance; reduction in hospitalization for cardioversion; lack of arrhythmia-related palpitations, dyspnea, and chest pain; reduced incidence of systemic embolism and/or stroke), but these benefits have never been demonstrated in clinical trials. Some of these benefits (e.g., reduction in stroke incidence) may be achievable by other means (anticoagulation).
By slowing the rate of atrial flutter/fibrillation, quinidine can decrease
the degree of atrioventricular block and cause an increase, sometimes marked,
in the rate at which supraventricular impulses are successfully conducted by
the atrioventricular node, with a resultant paradoxical increase in ventricular
rate (see WARNINGS).
Non-life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias
In studies of patients with a variety of ventricular arrhythmias (mainly frequent ventricular premature beats and non-sustained ventricular tachycardia), quinidine (total N = 502) has been compared to flecainide (N = 141), mexiletine (N = 246), propafenone (N = 53), and tocainide (N = 67). I n each of these studies, the mortality in the quinidine group was numerically greater than the mortality in the comparator group. When the studies were combined in a meta-analysis, quinidine was associated with a statistically significant threefold relative risk of death.
At therapeutic doses, quinidine's only consistent effect upon the surface electrocardiogram
is an increase in the QT interval. This prolongation can be monitored as a guide
to safety, and it may provide better guidance than serum drug levels (see WARNINGS).