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Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care logoLink to Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care
letter
. 2016 Jul-Sep;5(3):736–737. doi: 10.4103/2249-4863.197283

Aripiprazole cardiosafety: Is it overestimated?

Ahmed Naguy 1,
PMCID: PMC5290802  PMID: 28217624

Aripiprazole is a third-generation atypical (novel) antipsychotic, dihydroquinolinone, famously known as dopamine stabilizer, uniquely D2/D3 partial agonist, and 5HT1A agonist. It is a Food and Drug Administration-approved drug for schizophrenia, bipolar mood disorder, augmentation in unipolar depression, irritability in autism, and Tourette syndrome in pediatric age group. It is lauded for being cardiometabolic-friendly,[1] in stark contradistinction to most atypical antipsychotics currently on the market. Nelson and Leung[2] recently reported unusual QTc prolongation associated with aripiprazole use. Similarly, Hategan and Bourgeois[3] reported aripiprazole-associated QTc prolongation in a geriatric patient. Lam,[4] too, noted QTc prolongation associated with aripiprazole. Suzuki et al.[5] reported a dose-dependent of QTc interval at 30 mg of aripiprazole. Egger et al.[6] reported a case of dose-dependent aripiprazole-induced conduction disturbance. Torgovnick et al.[7] reported on aripiprazole-induced orthostatic hypotension and supraventricular tachyarrhythmia. Shao et al.[8] reported a case of ventricular trigeminy induced by overdose aripiprazole.

Here, I report on three cases where aripiprazole was associated with cardiac adversities.

Case 1: A 15-year-old female, bipolar I disorder, overweight, baseline electrocardiogram (ECG) and metabolic (Met) screen unrevealing, no history of cardiac comorbidities, was put to 45 mg aripiprazole monotherapy. She developed asymptomatic first-degree AV block that reversed on decreasing dose back to 30 mg/day within days. With rechallenging at 45 mg dosing, PR interval lengthened again at 22 ms. Naranjo Adverse Drug Reaction Probability Scale scored 7.

Case 2: A 48-year-old female, perimenopausal, schizoaffective disorder, bipolar subtype, baseline ECG and Met screen with negative yield, no vascular risks, no history of cardiac comorbidities, was maintained on risperidone 4 mg/day. She developed asymptomatic hyperprolactinemia. Aripiprazole 3 mg was added to mitigate hyperprolactinemia. Follow-up ECG read left bundle branch block. Aripiprazole was discontinued. ECG morphed into tachy-dependent anteroseptal subepicardial ischemia, and then normalized over a course of 2 weeks. Naranjo scale scored 3.

Case 3: A 32-year-old male, bipolar I disorder, manic, baseline ECG and Met screen unrevealing, no history of cardiac comorbidities, nonsmoker, was put to 30 mg aripiprazole with 2 mg clonazepam. ECG read right bundle branch block. He was shifted to olanzapine and ECG normalized shortly after. Naranjo scale scored 6.

These reports remain scattered. Nonetheless, it cast some doubt that aripiprazole cardiosafety taken at face value might be overstated. Hence, caution should be exercised while prescribing aripiprazole, especially for high-risk groups and cardiac monitoring might then be warranted.

Financial support and sponsorship

Nil.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

References

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