痛風治療薬が術後心房細動の発生を抑制する(Abstract # 18622)

コルヒチンは心膜切開後症候群および術後心房細動の発生を抑制する
Colchicine reduces incidence of post-pericardiotomy syndrome and post-surgery atrial fibrillation
しばしば痛風治療に用いられるコルヒチンは心臓手術後の心房細動(AF)の発生を大きく減少させる、とのlate-breaking researchの結果が2011年American Heart Association学会で発表されCirculationに掲載された。このプラセボコントロール無作為化スタディには、北イタリアの6施設で心臓手術を受けた患者336人(平均年齢66歳、男性69%)が組み入れられた。患者は術後3日からコルヒチンまたはプラセボ内服を開始し、1ヵ月継続した。1ヵ月後、コルヒチンはAF発現率を半分近く減少させた(コルヒチン内服群で12%であったのに対しプラセボ内服群で22%)。さらに、コルヒチン内服患者はプラセボ内服患者と比較し入院日数が3日間少なかった(21対24日)。副作用は少なく両群同等であったが、コルヒチン内服患者の方が消化器症状による忍容性がやや不良であった。このスタディはサンプルサイズが比較的小さく、内服は術後3日から開始されていることを筆者らは強調している。したがって、AFはしばしば術後早期に出現するため、勧告を変更する前に今後行う大規模スタディではコルヒチン治療をより早期に、理想的には術前に開始すべきである。
Full Text

The drug colchicine reduced the incidence of post-pericardiotomy syndrome and post-surgery atrial fibrillation by nearly half in a placebo-controlled, randomized study.

Colchicine, often used to treat gout, greatly reduced the incidence of atrial fibrillation after heart surgery, according to late-breaking research presented at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2011. The Italian study is also published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.

"This is the first time that colchicine has been shown to prevent atrial fibrillation," said Massimo Imazio, M.D., lead author of the study and a cardiologist at Maria Vittoria Hospital in Turin, Italy. "The findings are clinically significant and provide evidence that colchicine may represent a cheap, safe option for the prevention of the post-pericardiotomy syndrome and post-operative AF."

AF is the most frequent complication after heart procedures such as coronary artery bypass grafting, valve surgery or combined bypass/valve surgery. It may affect more than 50 percent of patients after cardiac surgery. Post-pericardiotomy syndrome is a potential cause of the condition, and colchicine may reduce incidence of this syndrome as well as postoperative AF by half, Imazio said.

The study included 336 heart surgery patients from six centers in northern Italy. Their average age was 66 and 69 percent were men.

Study participants received either colchicine or placebo, beginning three days after heart surgery and continuing for one month. Neither patients nor investigators knew who received active drug or placebo.

One month after heart surgery, colchicine had cut the incidence of AF nearly in half - 12 percent of those taking colchicine had AF compared to 22 percent of patients given a placebo.

Furthermore, colchicine patients were hospitalized three fewer days - 21 versus 24 - than those who received a placebo.

Side effects were minimal and similar between the two groups. But colchicine patients were slightly more likely to experience gastrointestinal intolerance, the most common side effect.

The study had a relatively small sample size and scientists started the medicine three days post-surgery. So, before changing recommendations, future large-scale studies should initiate colchicine treatment earlier, ideally before surgery, since postoperative AF often occurs in the early days after surgical intervention.

"In that way, you might also be able to prevent atrial fibrillation in the first few days after the cardiac operation," Imazio said.

Colchicine is a plant-derived substance from the drug class of alkaloids, which also includes morphine and caffeine. It is not currently approved in North America or Europe for pericarditis, post-pericardiotomy syndrome or for atrial fibrillation prevention.

Co-authors are Antonio Brucato, M.D.; Paolo Ferrazzi, M.D.; Maria Elena Rovere, M.D.; Anna Gandino, M.D.; Roberto Cemin, M.D.; Stefania Ferrua, M.D.; Riccardo Belli, M.D.; Silvia Maestroni, M.D.; Caterina Simon, M.D.; Edoardo Zingarelli, M.D.; Alberto Barosi, M.D.; Fabrizio Sansone, M.D.; Davide Patrini, M.D.; Ettore Vitali, M.D.; Rita Trinchero, M.D.; David H. Spodick, M.D.; and Yehuda Adler, M.D.

The Maria Vittoria Hospital, ASLTO2, in Torino, Italy, funded the study for the Italian National Healthcare System.