Introduction: Early clinical Phase I ECG investigations designed to replace the currently applied thorough QT (TQT) study are reviewed to examine how they could complement and verify the conclusions of nonclinical investigations and, in particular, the Comprehensive in vitro Proarrhythmia Assay (CiPA).
Topics: The IQ-CSRC trial is a prospective ascending multiple-dose first in human (FIH) type investigation performed as a possible replacement for the thorough QT study (TQT). Designed in accordance with the results of a simulation study by the FDA QT Interdisciplinary Review Team (IRT), it succeeded in correctly categorizing 5/5 established QTc-prolonging agents free of notable heart rate effects (dofetilide, dolasetron, moxifloxacin, ondansetron, and quinine) and the QTc-negative drug, levocetirizine.
Discussion: The positive results obtained with the IQ-CSRC study require additional confirmation with threshold QTc-positive and negative drugs and established QTc prolongers producing both increases and decreases in heart rate. In the future, similar studies should also adopt and validate innovative proarrhythmic metrics, in addition to, or instead of, the traditional proarrhythmic surrogate of QTc, to assess the proarrhythmic safety of candidate drugs.
Keywords: ECG restitution; Exposure-response relationship analysis; IQ-CSRC prospective study; Intensive early phase I ECG study; Positive and negative QTc-prolongers; Proarrhythmic metrics; Thorough QT study (TQT).
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