| Literature DB >> 33234131 |
Teerapat Nantsupawat1,2,3, Wanwarang Wongcharoen1,2,3, Siriporn C Chattipakorn2,3, Nipon Chattipakorn4,5,6.
Abstract
Metformin has been shown to have various cardiovascular benefits beyond its antihyperglycemic effects, including a reduction in stroke, heart failure, myocardial infarction, cardiovascular death, and all-cause mortality. However, the roles of metformin in cardiac arrhythmias are still unclear. It has been shown that metformin was associated with decreased incidence of atrial fibrillation in diabetic patients with and without myocardial infarction. This could be due to the effects of metformin on preventing the structural and electrical remodeling of left atrium via attenuating intracellular reactive oxygen species, activating 5' adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, improving calcium homeostasis, attenuating inflammation, increasing connexin-43 gap junction expression, and restoring small conductance calcium-activated potassium channels current. For ventricular arrhythmias, in vivo reports demonstrated that activation of 5' adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase and phosphorylated connexin-43 by metformin played a key role in ischemic ventricular arrhythmias reduction. However, metformin failed to show anti-ventricular arrhythmia benefits in clinical trials. In this review, in vitro and in vivo reports regarding the effects of metformin on both atrial arrhythmias and ventricular arrhythmias are comprehensively summarized and presented. Consistent and controversial findings from clinical trials are also summarized and discussed. Due to limited numbers of reports, further studies are needed to elucidate the mechanisms and effects of metformin on cardiac arrhythmias. Furthermore, randomized controlled trials are needed to clarify effects of metformin on cardiac arrhythmias in human.Entities:
Keywords: Arrhythmias; Atrial arrhythmias; Atrial fibrillation; Metformin; Ventricular arrhythmias
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33234131 PMCID: PMC7687769 DOI: 10.1186/s12933-020-01176-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Diabetol ISSN: 1475-2840 Impact factor: 9.951
Effects of metformin on atrial arrhythmias: reports from in vitro studies
| Model | Metformin (dose/ duration) | Key results and major findings | Interpretation | References | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy homeostasis | Oxidative stress | Intra-cellular Ca | Inflammation | Cx43 | EP changes | Cell structure | ||||
| HL-1 atrial cells paced with 4 Hz (240 bpm) for 24 h | 1 mmol/L for 2 h | – | ↓ROS | – | – | – | – | ↑Cytoplasmic myosin heavy chain/nuclear area ratio ↑Troponin I | Metformin provided cardioprotection against AF-related adverse remodeling via attenuating tachy-induced myolysis and oxidative stress of atria cells | [ |
| Neonatal rat cardiomyocytes and HL-1 cell with field stimulation at 3 Hz for 12 h | 0.5 & 1 mmol/L | ↓cAMP→ ↓pSrc→ ↑AMPK→ ↑Cx43 | – | – | – | ↑ | ↑FPD | ↑ZO-1 | Metformin attenuated a shortened FPD possibly by improved gap junction function via AMPK activation, increased ZO-1 and Cx43 expression | [ |
| 3T3-L1 mature adipocytes with LPS for 24 h then co-cultured with HL-1 atrial cell | 4 mmol/L incubated with adipocytes for 12 h | – | – | ↓Ca, ↑SERCA2a, ↑pPLN in HL-1 cell | ↑PPARγ/ APN, and ↓TNFα in adipocytes | – | – | – | Metformin improved Ca2+ homeostasis in HL-1 cell by attenuated the inflammatory interaction between adipocytes and HL-1 cell via an increased PPARγ/APN and suppressed TNFα | [ |
AMPK 5' adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, APN adiponectin, Ca calcium, cAMP cyclic adenosine monophosphate, Cx43 connexin 43, FPD field potential duration, LPS lipopolysaccharide, PPARγ peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, pPLN phosphorylated phospholamban, p-Src phopho-Src(Tyr416), ROS reactive oxygen species, SERCA2a sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase2a, TNFα tumor necrosis factor alpha, ZO-1 Zonula occludens-1
Effects of metformin on atrial arrhythmias: reports from in vivo studies
| Model | Metformin (dose/ duration) | Key results and major findings | Interpretation | References | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy homeostasis | ROS | Ion channel | Inflammation | Cx43 | EP changes | Structural remodel | AF | ||||
| Non-DM dogs with atrial rapid pacing (1200 bpm for 6 h) | 100 mg/kg/days for 2 weeks | ↑↑AMPK -↑PPARα, PGC-1α, VLCAD, CPT-1 | – | – | – | – | ↑AERP ↓AERPd | ↓FFA/TG /lipid deposition in LAA | – | Metformin improved EP disorders caused by atrial rapid pacing via ↓lipid accumulation and promoted FAO in AF models through AMPK/PPAR-α/VLCAD pathway | [ |
| Non-DM dogs with rapid atrial pacing (400 bpm for 6 weeks) | 100 mg/kg/days for 1 week prior then 6 weeks | – | ↓ in LA/EAT | – | – ↑APN, adipoR1 – ↓ IL-6, NF-kB, TNFα, TGFβ1 | – | ↑AERP ↓AERPd | ↓LA fibrosis and EAT | ↓ | Metformin reduced AF and atrial fibrosis by inhibited ROS/NF-kB, reduced epicardial fat, pro-inflammatory adipokines, and upregulated adiponectin in LA/EAT | [ |
| Non-DM dogs with rapid atrial pacing 400 bpm | 100 mg/kg/days for 1 week then pace for 180/ 360 min (acute) | – | – | – | – | ↑ | ↔ AERPd | – | – | Metformin reduced AF by preventing adverse electrical remodeling via increase AMPK and Cx43 expression in chronic AF model. Metformin mildly increased Cx43 in acute pacing and could not attenuate AERPd | [ |
| 100 mg/kg/days with pace for 6 weeks (chronic) | ↑AMPK ↔ mito-chondrial morphology | – | – | – | ↑↑ | ↑AERP ↓AERPd | ↔Irregular myocardial fibers | ↓ | |||
| GK T2DM rats | 300 mg/kg/days for 3 months | - ↔ SK1, ↑SK2,↓SK3 | ↓ APD | ↓ Atrial myofilament irregularity and fibrosis | ↓ | Metformin reduced atrial arrhythmia in DM GK rats via decreased atrial remodeling and normalized APD via restoring SK current | [ | ||||
adipoR1 adiponectin receptor 1, AERP atrial effective refractory period, AERPd AERP dispersion, AMPK 5' adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, APD action potential duration, bpm beats per minutes, APN adiponectin, Ca calcium, CPT-1 Carnitine palmitoyltransferase I, EAT epicardial adipose tissue, EP electrophysiologic, FAO fatty acid oxidation, FFA free fatty acid, GK Goto-Kakizaki, LA left atrium, LAA left atrial appendage, PGC-1α peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1α, PPAR-α peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α, ROS reactive oxygen species, SK channels small conductance calcium-activated potassium channels, TG triglyceride, TGFβ1 transforming growth factor beta1, TNFα tumor necrosis factor alpha, VLCAD Very long-chain specific acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
Fig. 1Effects of metformin on atrial arrhythmias. Atrial fibrillation, obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes mellitus can cause atrial structural, electrical, electromechanical, and autonomic adverse remodeling. These remodelings become arrhythmogenic substrates and set out a vicious cycle known as “AF begets AF”. Metformin exerts protective effects through various mechanisms. Red arrow shows adverse effects from atrial fibrillation, obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes. Green rectangle shows pathway that metformin blocked. Solid green arrow shows protective mechanisms of metformin directly demonstrated from the studies in Tables 1 and 2. Dotted green arrow indicates protective mechanism of metformin from other studies in the text
Effects of metformin on atrial arrhythmias: reports from clinical trials
| Model | Type of study/No. of patients/follow-up | Metformin (dose/duration) | AF incidence | Interpretation | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Taiwanese DM patients treated with metformin alone vs. other meds (mean age 58 years) | Longitudinal cohort/85,198 metformin users and 560,512 non-users/mean follow-up 5.4 years | Various dose and duration of metformin | - ↓ AF incidence in the first 3 years after diagnosis of DM - HR of 0.81, p < 0.0001 | Metformin associated with decreased incidence of AF during the first 3 years after the diagnosis of DM | [ | |
Taiwanese DM patients w/ or w/o metformin (mean age 69 years) | Nested case control study/2882 AF and 11,528 controls/mean DM duration 3.9 years | - Various dose - At least 6 months of drug used | - ↓ AF incidence - OR 0.81, 95%CI 0.71–0.95 | Metformin associated with decreased new onset AF | [ | |
Hospitalized DM patients with AMI w/ or w/o metformin (mean age 56) | Retrospective cohort/40 Metformin alone and 705 others/28-day post AMI | Various dose | - Metformin alone: <-> 28-day AF incidence, OR 1.1 (95%CI 0.3–4.0) - Metformin + other anti-DM drugs: ↓28-day AF incidence, OR 0.2 (95% CI 0.1–0.7) | Metformin in combination with other anti-DM drugs associated with decreased AF incidence 28-day post AMI | [ | |
(mean age 73 years) | Nested case-control/1958 cases and 7832 controls/mean DM duration 8 years | - Various dose - At least 12 months of drug used | - <-> AF incidence - OR 1.01 (0.88–1.15) | Metformin was not associated with decreased AF incidence in elderly DM population | [ | |
Patients without DM undergoing cardiac surgery randomized to metformin or placebo (mean age 65 years) | Double-blind, randomized controlled trial/57 to metformin, 57 to placebo/24-h post reperfusion | Metformin 500 mg TID for 3 days before surgery | - <-> 24-h post reperfusion Trop I level and arrhythmia | Short-term metformin pre-surgery did not decrease perioperative myocardial injury or AF in non-DM undergoing cardiac surger | [ | |
DM pts undergoing cardiac surgery w/ or w/o metformin (mean age 66 years) | Retrospective matched cohort/metformin 635, non-metformin 648/post-op until hospital discharge | Metformin | - <-> post-op AF incidence - post-op AF 26.3% in metformin vs. 30.7% in non-metformin(p = 0.46) | Prior use of metformin in DM patients undergoing cardiac surgery was not associated with decreased post-op AF | [ | |
AF atrial fibrillation, AMI acute myocardial infarction, DM diabetes mellitus
Effects of metformin on ventricular arrhythmias: reports from in vivo studies
| Model | Metformin (dose/ duration) | Key results and major findings | Interpretation | References | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy | Oxidative | Intra-cellular Ca | LV | Infarct/ | EP changes | p-Cx 43 | VT/ VF | ||||
Domestic farm pigs with cardiac I/R injury -I(50% flow)/R = 90/45 min | -Chronic metformin 30 mg/kg/day per oral for 2–3 weeks) | - ↑↑AMPK - ↑CS - ↑ATP - <-> O2, glucose use, lactate | – | – | <-> | – | -↓MAP shortening -↓APD dispersion | – | ↓ | Chronic metformin treatment reduced ischemic VF by preventing MAP shortening and repolarization heterogeneity via AMPK activation, leading to preserved myocardial ATP | [ |
-Acute Metformin IV 100 mg/kg | <-> AMPK | – | – | <-> | – | <-> | – | <-> | |||
| Male Wistar rats fed with high fat for 12 weeks underwent cardiac I/R injury. (LAD ligation 30/R 120 min) | Metformin 30 mg/kg/day for 3 weeks | ↑Mito-chondrial function | ↓MDA | -↓Diastolic Ca -↑transient amp/decay | ↑ | ↓Infarct/ ↓Bax, ↑Bcl-2 | ↑HRV | <-> | <-> | Metformin alone did not reduce VT/VF incidence. However, combined drugs effectively decreased VT/VF via increased p-Cx43 | [ |
Metformin+ Vildagliptin | ↑Mito-chondrial function | ↓MDA | -↓Diastolic Ca -↑Transient amp/decay | ↑ | ↓Infarct/ ↓Bax, ↑Bcl-2 | ↑HRV | ↑ | ↓ | |||
AMPK 5' adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, APD action potential duration, ATP adenosine triphosphate, Ca calcium, CS citrate synthase, EP electrophysiologic, HRV heart rate variability, I/R ischemic/reperfusion, LAD left anterior descending coronary artery, LV left ventricular, MAP monophasic action potential, MDA malondialdehyde, pAMPK phosphorylated 5' adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase, p-Cx phosphorylated Connexin, VT/VF ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation
Fig. 2Effects of metformin on ventricular arrhythmias. Ischemia causes reduction in myocardial ATP and finally results in ventricular fibrillation. Chronic metformin use exerts its energy guardian effects mainly via AMPK activation. Additionally, metformin prevents QT interval prolongation, QT dispersion, and conduction velocity delay by regulating microRNA-1 and L-type calcium channels. Only the combination of metformin and vildagliptin could increase p-Cx43 and subsequently reduce ventricular fibrillation. Green rectangle and arrow shows protective mechanisms of metformin
Effects of metformin on ventricular arrhythmias: reports from clinical trials
| Model | Type of study/No. of patients/FU | Metformin (dose/duration) | Key results and major findings | Interpretation | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DM patients with CAD monitored via 24-h Holter monitor (mean age 55) | Randomized crossover design/19 patients/2 weeks | Metformin 500 mg BID for 2 weeks | - <-> PVC/NSVT per minute of ischemia | Metformin did not reduce PVC/NSVT in diabetic CAD patients | [ |
Hospitalized DM patients with AMI (mean age 56) | Retrospective cohort/40 Metformin alone and 705 others/28-day post AMI | Various doses | - <-> 28-days VT/VF incidence | Metformin alone or in combination with other anti-DM drugs was not associated with decreased 28-day post AMI VT/VF incidence | [ |
AMI acute myocardial infarction, CAD coronary artery disease, DM diabetes mellitus, PVC/NSVT premature ventricular contraction/non-sustained ventricular tachycardia, VT/VF ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation
Effect of metformin on arrhythmias: ongoing clinical trials
| Model | Status | Type of study/No. of patients/FU | Intervention | Primary outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients with paroxysmal or persistent AF with CIED | Recruiting | Phase 4 Randomized clinical trial/270 patients/2 years | - Metformin 750 mg twice daily × 2 years - Lifestyle/risk factor modification | Change in %AF burden at 1 year | [ |
| Patients with AF who underwent AF catheter ablation | Terminated | Phase 2 Randomized clinical trial/6 patients/6 months | - Metformin 1000 mg twice daily | Number of patients who maintain sinus rhythm | [ |
AF atrial fibrillation, CIED cardiovascular implantable electronic device