Methadone-Induced QT Interval Prolongation in a Narcotic Treatment Center

NCT02898337 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 170

Last updated 2021-07-08

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Torsades de pointes (TdP) is a polymorphic ventricular tachycardia associated with prolongation of the heart rate-corrected QT (QTc) interval on the electrocardiogram (ECG). TdP can result in catastrophic outcomes, including sudden cardiac death. QTc interval prolongation is a well-known adverse event associated with methadone use. While some risk factors for methadone-associated QTc interval prolongation and TdP have been identified, the contribution of interacting drugs and concomitant administration of other QTc interval-prolonging agents to overall risk has not been determined. The effect of ECG screening and monitoring on clinical outcomes in patients taking methadone has not been evaluated, and clinical opinion regarding routine ECG and risk factor monitoring varies. Twelve lead ECGs are costly and time-intensive for clinic staff. ECG screening in selected patients based on presence of QTc interval risk factors, rather than broadly in all patients taking methadone, would facilitate more targeted, strategic QTc interval monitoring. The FDA-approved AliveCor® handheld smart phone/tablet device records a single lead ECG (iECG) within 30 seconds. Use of this device may facilitate simpler, more rapid and less costly ECG monitoring in patients receiving care in narcotic treatment centers.

Our long-term goals are to determine mechanisms by which drugs cause arrhythmias, to identify patients at greatest risk of drug-induced arrhythmias, and to determine safe and effective methods for prevention and management of drug-induced arrhythmias.

Specific Aim 1: Identify independent risk factors for methadone-induced QTc interval prolongation in patients undergoing care in a narcotic treatment center.

Research Design: This will be a retrospective/prospective analysis of ECGs and health information from patients receiving methadone therapy in the Eskenazi Health Midtown Narcotic Treatment Center in Indianapolis, IN. Currently, at the Midtown Narcotic Treatment Center, baseline 12-lead ECGs are recorded for all patients prior to initiation of methadone therapy; follow-up ECGs are obtained approximately 2 weeks after methadone initiation only in patients with a baseline prolonged QTc interval. At the start of the study, methadone-treated patients who have not had follow-up ECGs on methadone therapy will be identified and contacted prospectively. Those consenting to participation will undergo a follow-up 12-lead ECG to determine QTc interval during methadone maintenance therapy. For all patients, retrospective analysis of the electronic medical record will be performed to document sex, pregnancy status, age, family history, current and past medical history, and concomitant use of prescribed, over the counter, and illicit drug use with the aim to identify all potential risks. QTc interval prolongation will be defined as QTc interval ≥ 500 ms or an increase in QTc interval of ≥ 60 ms compared with the baseline QTc interval. Electronic health information variables will be compared in patients who develop methadone-associated QTc interval prolongation versus those who do not using univariate analysis. Patients with prolonged QTc interval at baseline will be excluded from the study.

Specific Aim 2: Validate the handheld AliveCor® smart phone/tablet iECG device as a simple, rapid method of monitoring QTc intervals in methadone-treated patients in a narcotic treatment center.

Research Design: A separate cohort of patients will be utilized to validate the AliveCor® device for use in measuring QTc intervals in patients initiated and maintained on methadone in a narcotic treatment center. Twelve lead ECGs and simultaneous single lead ECGs using the AliveCor® device will be recorded for all newly enrolled patients at baseline and again after six weeks of methadone therapy. The QTc identified by the 12-lead ECG will be compared to the single lead ECG for all baseline and follow-up recordings to validate the use of the AliveCor® device for potential use in narcotic treatment centers to reduce cost and save time. Comparison of QTc intervals between the 12-lead and single lead measurements will be performed using the Bland-Altman method for analysis of measurement agreement. The mean and 95% confidence interval of the difference in QTc interval between the two methods will be calculated.

This will be a pilot study to justify a larger extramural study to develop and validate a risk score for methadone-induced QTc interval prolongation and to use the handheld ECG device for QTc interval monitoring in patients identified as high-risk using this risk score. Our rationale is that identification of risk factors for methadone-induced QTc interval prolongation and quantification of degree of risk conferred by each risk factor will ultimately reduce the incidence and risk of QTc interval prolongation through targeted ECG monitoring of patients at highest risk and modulation of modifiable risk factors.

Conditions

  • QT Interval Prolongation

Interventions

DEVICE

AliveCor handheld mobile ECG

Specific Aim 1: independent risk factors for methadone-associated QTc interval prolongation will be determined through retrospective analysis of electronic medical records of methadone-treated patients in a narcotic treatment center. Patients will be asked to come to the Narcotic Treatment Center for one 12-lead ECG Specific Aim 2: QTc intervals from ECGs generated by the AliveCor® heart monitor will be compared prospectively to simultaneous twelve lead ECGs for validation purposes in the methadone-treated patients in a narcotic treatment center.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Purdue University

    collaborator OTHER
  • Indiana University

    lead OTHER

Eligibility

Min Age
18 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2016-11-30
Primary Completion
2018-05-22
Completion
2018-05-22

Countries

  • United States

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT02898337 on ClinicalTrials.gov