Ranolazine in patients with chronic coronarysyndromes: real-world data provide newevidence on the antiarrhythmic properties of the drug

Aims: Ranolazine (Ran) is an anti-anginal drug inhibiting late sodium current, an action possibly hindering arrhythmias onset. Indeed, some evidence supports the anti-arrhythmic effects of Ran. The aim of this study, which evaluated Italian patients with
chronic coronary syndrome (CCS), was to investigate whether Ran, as an add-on therapy, was associated with a lower incidence
of atrial fibrillation (AF) compared with no-Ran prescription (No-Ran).
Methods and results: The original population (N = 6.1 million) derived from the databases of the Italian National Health System; information concerned hospitalizations with the related diagnoses, drug therapy, follow-up clinical events and visits. Patients hospitalized between 2011 and 2020 for any cause and discharged with an ICD-9-CM CCS code were studied if AF had not been diagnosed before. The follow-up duration was 4.4 and 5.0 years for the Ran and the No-Ran cohorts, respectively. Study subjects
were 171 015 (mean age: 72 years; men: 66%; Ran: N = 22 207; No-Ran: N = 148 808). After propensity score matching, Ran (N = 6384) and No-Ran (N = 25 536) cohorts were similar for age, sex, comorbidities and drug therapy. AF incidence during follow-up was 5.3% and 9.6% in the Ran and in the No-Ran cohorts, respectively, with a 41% drug-related lower risk of arrhythmia development in the Cox model (HR = 0.59, 95% CI: 0.53–0.67, P < 0.001). Also, Ran correlated with reduced incidence of brady-arrhythmias (P = 0.001) and ventricular tachy-arrhythmias (P = 0.049), and with lower mortality (P < 0.001).
Conclusion: Our study, performed in a subset of the Italian CCS population, showed that Ran therapy was safe and associated with a long-term reduced AF incidence.