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Original Research

Thorough cardiac QTc interval conductance assessment of a novel oral tranexamic acid treatment for heavy menstrual bleeding

, PharmD, , PhD, , MD, , BSc, , MSc, , MD & , PharmD show all
Pages 2281-2290 | Published online: 10 Aug 2010
 

Abstract

Objective: To assess the effect of a novel oral tranexamic acid treatment on cardiac repolarization in a randomized, double-blind, positive- and placebo-controlled, four-treatment single-dose cross-over inpatient study.

Methods: QTc interval and drug exposure relationship analyses were performed using triplicate digital electrocardiographs (ECGs) collected from 12-lead Holter monitors from healthy females (n = 48) with plasma drug concentrations and pharmacokinetics simultaneously evaluated over 24 h post-dose. Therapeutic (1.3 g) and supratherapeutic (3.9 g) tranexamic acid modified immediate-release doses, a positive-control 0.4 g moxifloxacin dose, and a placebo-control were administered at each period.

Results: All post-dose, time-matched, baseline-adjusted, mean QTcF (Fridericia's heart rate correction, QT/RR1/3) treatment-placebo differences (ΔΔQTcF), were less than 5 milliseconds (ms) for the 1.3 g and 3.9 g tranexamic acid doses. Upper limits of the 95% confidence interval (CI) for all tranexamic acid-placebo ΔΔQTcF doses were < 10 ms for all time points. Lower limits of the 95% CI for the positive-control (moxifloxacin-placebo) ΔΔQTcF were > 5 ms at multiple time points demonstrating assay sensitivity. No correlation between tranexamic acid plasma concentrations and adjusted QTc intervals was observed. A positive linear relationship was observed for moxifloxacin (p < 0.01).

Conclusion: Cardiac repolarization is not influenced by tranexamic acid at the doses studied.

Acknowledgements

Presented as a poster at the 2009 Spring Practice and Research Forum meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP), Orlando, Florida, April 24 – 28, 2009.

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