Cardionerds: A Cardiology Podcast

439. Atrial Fibrillation: Anti-Arrhythmic Drugs in the Management of Atrial Arrhythmias with Dr. Andrew Epstein

Dec 25, 2025
Dr. Andrew Epstein, an electrophysiologist and professor at the University of Pennsylvania, dives deep into the world of anti-arrhythmic drugs. He explains the roles of class IC and class III agents in managing atrial fibrillation, detailing their mechanisms, efficacy, and patient selection. The conversation highlights the advantages of drugs alongside catheter ablation, emphasizes monitoring for side effects, and compares treatments like amiodarone and digoxin. Epstein's insights into drug interactions and individualized therapy provide vital knowledge for practitioners.
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INSIGHT

Drugs And Ablation Are Not Opponents

  • Rhythm control with drugs and ablation are complementary, not mutually exclusive.
  • EAST-AFNET showed early rhythm control with drugs improved outcomes even though ablation was used rarely.
ADVICE

Pill‑In‑Pocket For Infrequent AF

  • Use class 1C agents like flecainide or propafenone for patients without ischemia who want infrequent 'pill‑in‑the‑pocket' conversion.
  • Dose immediate‑release flecainide/propafenone (300 mg or 600 mg) and expect >50% conversion within hours.
ANECDOTE

Traveler Converted AF In The Wild

  • A traveling nurse used pill‑in‑the‑pocket flecainide on mission trips and successfully converted episodes in remote areas.
  • He avoided daily therapy and converted reliably every nine months or so.
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