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    Home»Health»Clinical Trial Confirms: Nasal Spray Safely Treats Recurrent Abnormal Heart Rhythms
    Health

    Clinical Trial Confirms: Nasal Spray Safely Treats Recurrent Abnormal Heart Rhythms

    By Weill Cornell MedicineJuly 20, 20241 Comment4 Mins Read
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    Heart Problems
    A study by Weill Cornell Medicine revealed that a nasal spray called etripamil, administered by patients at home, effectively treats rapid abnormal heart rhythms associated with paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT), reducing the need for hospital visits. Led by Dr. James Ip, the research found etripamil to be safe and efficient, potentially replacing more invasive hospital treatments, and showed promising real-world application results, including in patients previously excluded from trials due to other heart conditions.

    A new study has demonstrated that etripamil, a home-administered nasal spray, safely and effectively treats PSVT, a condition causing rapid heart rhythms, potentially minimizing hospital visits and invasive procedures.

    Investigators from Weill Cornell Medicine conducted a clinical trial that demonstrated a nasal spray could successfully and safely treat recurrent abnormal rapid heart rhythms at home, without a physician’s assistance. Published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, the study presents real-world evidence that the experimental drug, etripamil, is both safe and effective for a broad range of patients managing recurrent paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT) episodes. This could significantly reduce the need for hospital visits and more invasive treatments.

    The study is the latest in a series of studies by lead author Dr. James Ip, professor of clinical medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine and a cardiologist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, and colleagues to demonstrate the potential of nasal spray calcium-channel blocker etripamil as an at-home treatment PSVT. Dr. Ip received compensation as a steering committee member for Milestone Pharmaceuticals, the maker of etripamil and sponsor of the trial.

    Symptoms and Conventional Treatments for PSVT

    Patients with PSVT experience sudden and recurrent rapid heart rhythms triggered by abnormal electrical activity in the upper chambers of the heart. Though the episodes are not commonly life-threatening, they can be frightening and cause shortness of breath, chest pain, dizziness or fainting and lead to frequent emergency department visits. Treatment for PSVT often requires hospitalization to receive intravenous medication. Some patients undergo a procedure called cardiac ablation, where the physician threads thin wires through their blood vessels to the heart and uses them to treat the short circuits the cause the abnormal normal heart rhythm.

    Dr. Ip and colleagues previously showed that almost two-thirds of patients with PSVT who took one or more doses of the calcium channel blocker etripamil without a physician present experienced symptom relief on average in 17 minutes. The latest study builds on those findings, showing that etripamil is safe and effective under more real-world circumstances in a larger patient population, and could be safely used to treat multiple episodes of PSVT.

    The new study enrolled 1116 patients at 148 sites in the United States, Canada and South America. It did not require a pretest dose supervised by a physician as the previous studies did. It also included patients with a history of atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter, who were excluded from the previous studies. Patients monitored their heart for one hour with a home electrocardiogram monitor after self-administering the first dose, took an additional dose if necessary, and were allowed to self-treat up to four PSVT episodes with etripamil.

    Two-thirds of the patients experienced relief within an hour, and the average time needed for symptom relief was 17 minutes. Mild, temporary nasal symptoms such as runny nose, nasal congestion or discomfort, and bloody nose were common after the first use of etripamil but became less common with subsequent use.

    Reference: “Etripamil Nasal Spray for Recurrent Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardia Conversion” by James E. Ip, Benoit Coutu, Peter A. Noseworthy, Maria L. Parody, Farhad Rafii, Samuel F. Sears, Narendra Singh, Bruce S. Stambler, David B. Bharucha and A. John Camm, 25 March 2024, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2024.03.384

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    Cardiology Drugs Heart Public Health Weill Cornell Medicine
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    1 Comment

    1. Charles G. Shaver on July 21, 2024 4:26 am

      PSVT sounds like palpitations due to practically harmless individual nearly subclinical non-IgE-mediated food allergy reactions (e.g., Dr. Arthur F. Coca, by 1935; https://www.seleneriverpress.com/historical/nonreaginic-allergy-in-theory-and-practice/) aggravated with added artificially cultured “free” (can cross the blood brain barrier) MSG to me which, to personal experience, spontaneously resolve in a matter of minutes. While the nasal spray may help, some, banning FDA approved added neurotoxic MSG for prevention should be a much better fix.

      Reply
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