Drug Monograph

Ivabradine

Brand names: Corlanor (US) · Procoralan (EU)
Sinoatrial node modulator (HCN channel blocker / If inhibitor) · Oral
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
Distribution t½ ~2 h; effective t½ ~6 h (per Corlanor PI)
Metabolism
Extensive hepatic and intestinal via CYP3A4; active N-desmethyl metabolite (S 18982) circulates at ~40% of parent
Protein Binding
~70%
Bioavailability
~40% (high first-pass effect in gut and liver)
Volume of Distribution
~100 L at steady state
Renal Excretion
~4% unchanged in urine; metabolites cleared roughly equally via faeces and urine
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Hyperpolarisation-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channel blocker — selective If current inhibitor
Available Doses
Tablets: 5 mg (scored), 7.5 mg; Oral solution: 5 mg/5 mL (1 mg/mL)
Route
Oral, twice daily with food
Renal Adjustment
No adjustment for CrCl 15–60 mL/min; no data for CrCl <15
Hepatic Adjustment
No adjustment in mild–moderate (Child-Pugh A–B); contraindicated in severe (Child-Pugh C)
Pregnancy
Embryo-fetal toxicity and teratogenicity in animal studies — effective contraception required
Lactation
Breastfeeding not recommended (animal data show transfer to milk)
Schedule / Status
Rx only; not controlled. Initial US approval 2015 (adult); pediatric extension 04/2019
Generic Available
Yes (multiple US generics; brand Corlanor still marketed)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Reduction of HF hospitalisation in stable, symptomatic chronic HFrEFAdults with LVEF ≤35%, sinus rhythm, resting HR ≥70 bpm, on max-tolerated beta-blocker (or contraindication to beta-blockade)Adjunctive to GDMTFDA Approved (2015)
Stable symptomatic heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathyPediatric patients ≥6 months in sinus rhythm with elevated heart rateAdjunctiveFDA Approved (2019)

Ivabradine is a pure heart-rate-lowering agent — it slows the sinoatrial node without affecting contractility, blood pressure, or ventricular repolarisation. Its niche in adult heart failure is narrow but well defined: the SHIFT trial population of HFrEF patients with persistent resting tachycardia (HR ≥70 bpm) despite maximally tolerated beta-blockade. In SHIFT (n=6,558 randomised), ivabradine reduced the primary composite of cardiovascular death or hospitalisation for worsening heart failure (hazard ratio 0.82, 95% CI 0.75–0.90, p<0.0001), driven principally by a reduction in HF hospitalisations; there was no significant effect on cardiovascular mortality.

The drug should be reserved for patients meeting the SHIFT trial criteria — in particular, sinus rhythm and a target heart rate that cannot be achieved with optimised beta-blocker therapy. Ivabradine is not a substitute for beta-blockers in HFrEF; the SHIFT subgroup analysis showed diminishing benefit at higher beta-blocker doses, with little if any apparent effect in patients already at guideline-target beta-blocker doses. Ivabradine also offers no benefit in patients with atrial fibrillation, where it may both fail to reduce ventricular rate and increase the risk of new arrhythmia.

Off-Label Uses

Inappropriate sinus tachycardia (IST) — supported by the 2015 HRS expert consensus statement on the diagnosis and treatment of postural tachycardia syndrome, IST and vasovagal syncope. Evidence quality: moderate (small RCTs and observational studies).

Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) — heart-rate selectivity makes it attractive when beta-blockers are not tolerated. Evidence quality: low–moderate.

Postoperative junctional ectopic tachycardia in pediatric cardiac surgery — refractory cases. Evidence quality: low (case series).

Stable angina (chronic coronary syndromes) — approved in Europe (Procoralan) but not in the United States. The SIGNIFY trial in CAD without HF showed no benefit on the primary composite (HR 1.08, 95% CI 0.96–1.20).

Atrial fibrillation rate control — investigational; the BRAKE-AF trial showed ivabradine was less effective than digoxin for permanent AF. Evidence quality: low; not recommended for this purpose.

Dose

Dosing

Ivabradine is taken twice daily with food (food delays absorption by approximately 1 hour but increases plasma exposure by 20–40% and reduces variability). The drug is titrated to a target resting heart rate of 50–60 bpm in adults — adjustments are made every two weeks based on the resting heart rate measured at the next visit.

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
HFrEF — standard adult initiation5 mg PO BID5–7.5 mg PO BID7.5 mg BIDTake with food. Reassess HR at 2 weeks
Target resting HR 50–60 bpm
HFrEF — patients with conduction defects, or where bradycardia could lead to haemodynamic compromise (also “vulnerable adults” per PI)2.5 mg PO BID2.5–7.5 mg PO BID7.5 mg BIDSlower up-titration; check HR before each escalation
Resting HR >60 bpm at follow-upIncrease by 2.5 mg BID7.5 mg BIDPer PI Table 1. Reassess in 2 weeks
Resting HR 50–60 bpmMaintain current doseTherapeutic target achieved
Resting HR <50 bpm or signs/symptoms of bradycardiaDecrease by 2.5 mg BIDPer PI: if current dose is already 2.5 mg BID, discontinue therapy

Pediatric Dosing (Heart Failure due to Dilated Cardiomyopathy, ≥6 months)

Per the Corlanor PI, pediatric dosing is structured by body weight, not age — under 40 kg uses weight-based oral solution, 40 kg or greater uses tablets. The pediatric titration target is at least a 20% reduction in resting heart rate (rather than the adult target of 50–60 bpm).

GroupStarting DoseTitrationMaximum DoseNotes
≥6 months, <1 year, <40 kg0.05 mg/kg PO BIDAdjust by 0.05 mg/kg every 2 weeks based on HR/tolerability0.2 mg/kg BIDUse oral solution. Take with food. If a dose is missed or spit out, do not give a replacement dose
Target ≥20% HR reduction
≥1 year, <40 kg0.05 mg/kg PO BIDAdjust by 0.05 mg/kg every 2 weeks0.3 mg/kg BID (capped at 7.5 mg BID total)Oral solution preferred for accurate weight-based dosing
≥40 kg2.5 mg PO BIDAdjust by 2.5 mg every 2 weeks7.5 mg BIDTablets or oral solution
Bradycardia at the recommended initial dose (any pediatric weight)Per PI: consider reducing the dose to 0.02 mg/kg BID

Special Populations

PopulationRecommendationNotes
Renal impairment (CrCl 15–60 mL/min)No adjustmentRenal excretion ~4%; minimal effect on PK
Severe renal impairment (CrCl <15 mL/min)No data; use with cautionPer PI: data not available
Mild–moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh A–B)No adjustmentPK similar to normal hepatic function (per PI)
Severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C)ContraindicatedNo data; increased exposure anticipated
Older adults / vulnerable adultsStart 2.5 mg BIDPer PI; titrate cautiously based on HR and tolerability
Clinical Pearls — Dosing

Per the Corlanor PI, heart-rate reduction with ivabradine is dose- and baseline-dependent: greater absolute reductions occur in patients with higher baseline rates. At recommended doses, expect approximately 10 bpm reduction at rest and during exercise; the effect plateaus at doses above 20 mg twice daily, so no benefit is gained beyond 7.5 mg BID and adverse-event risk increases.

Ivabradine is only effective in sinus rhythm. If a patient develops atrial fibrillation, the drug must be discontinued — it does not control AV-nodal conduction and may worsen the arrhythmia (per Section 5.2 of the PI).

Ivabradine is added after beta-blocker optimisation, not as a substitute. SHIFT enrolled patients on a maximally tolerated beta-blocker (or with a documented contraindication); only 26% were at guideline-target beta-blocker doses at baseline, with hypotension, fatigue, and dyspnoea being the most common reasons for not reaching target.

Avoid grapefruit juice and St. John’s wort (per PI patient-counselling section).

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Ivabradine selectively blocks the hyperpolarisation-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels — predominantly HCN4 — that generate the “funny current” (If) in sinoatrial node pacemaker cells. This current drives the slow diastolic depolarisation that determines spontaneous firing rate. By inhibiting If, ivabradine reduces the slope of diastolic depolarisation and slows sinus rate without affecting myocardial contractility or ventricular repolarisation. In clinical electrophysiology studies, IV ivabradine slowed heart rate by approximately 15 bpm and modestly increased PR and AH intervals (~29 msec and ~27 msec respectively); there is no rate-corrected QT prolongation. Heart-rate reduction is dose- and baseline-dependent and plateaus above approximately 20 mg twice daily. Because HCN channels are also expressed in the retina (where they are involved in the response to abrupt changes in luminosity), ivabradine produces a characteristic visual side effect known as phosphenes — transient flashes or enhanced brightness in the visual field, especially during sudden light changes.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionTmax ~1 h fasting; food delays absorption by ~1 h. Absolute oral bioavailability ~40% (extensive first-pass in gut and liver). Food increases plasma exposure by 20–40% and reduces variabilityAlways administer with food. Inter-patient variability is meaningful — titrate to clinical response (HR), not to a fixed dose.
DistributionVd at steady state ~100 L; plasma protein binding ~70% (mainly albumin)Routine drug-displacement interactions are not clinically significant.
MetabolismExtensive hepatic and intestinal metabolism via CYP3A4 (sole pathway). PK linear over 0.5–24 mg. Active N-desmethyl metabolite (S 18982) is equipotent and circulates at ~40% of parent concentrations; also CYP3A4-clearedCYP3A4 inhibitors and inducers dominate the interaction profile. Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors are contraindicated; moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors and inducers should be avoided.
EliminationTotal clearance ~24 L/h; renal clearance ~4.2 L/h. Approximately 4% excreted unchanged in urine; metabolites cleared roughly equally via faeces and urine. Distribution t½ ~2 h; effective t½ ~6 hRenal impairment has minimal effect on exposure unless severe (CrCl <15 mL/min, where data are absent). Hepatic impairment is the more important PK consideration.
SE

Side Effects

The adverse-effect profile is dominated by predictable on-target effects: bradycardia, atrial fibrillation, and phosphenes. The Corlanor PI reports incidences in two complementary ways: absolute rates over the SHIFT trial median exposure of 21.5 months (n=3,260 ivabradine vs n=3,278 placebo), and rates per patient-year for the principal safety signals. Both are presented below.

≥10% Very Common Adverse Effects (SHIFT absolute rate)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Bradycardia (SHIFT, absolute rate over 21.5 months)10.0% vs 2.2% placeboPer Corlanor PI Table 2. The same trial reports a per-patient-year rate of 6.0% (2.7% symptomatic + 3.4% asymptomatic) versus 1.3% placebo.
1–10% Common Adverse Effects (SHIFT absolute rates over 21.5 months)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Hypertension / increased blood pressure8.9% vs 7.8% placeboModest excess over placebo. Listed in PI Table 2; usually managed with adjustment of background antihypertensive therapy.
Atrial fibrillation8.3% vs 6.6% placeboPer PI Table 2. The PI separately reports a per-patient-year rate of 5.0% (ivabradine) versus 3.9% (placebo). Discontinue ivabradine if AF develops.
Phosphenes / luminous visual phenomena2.8% vs 0.5% placeboTransient enhanced brightness, halos, kaleidoscopic effects — usually triggered by abrupt luminosity change. Mediated by retinal HCN inhibition (per PI Section 12.1). Onset within the first 2 months; usually mild–moderate; led to discontinuation in <1%.

Note: Additional adverse reactions in the current Corlanor PI are listed only as adverse-event categories rather than discrete percentages. Postmarketing reports include syncope, hypotension, torsade de pointes, ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, angioedema, erythema, rash, pruritus, urticaria, vertigo, diplopia, and visual impairment (frequencies unknown).

Serious Serious Adverse Effects (regardless of frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Symptomatic bradycardia2.7% per patient-year (SHIFT) vs <1% placeboFirst 2–3 monthsReduce dose by 2.5 mg BID; if at 2.5 mg BID, discontinue. Severe bradycardia: atropine, isoproterenol; temporary pacing if refractory.
New-onset atrial fibrillation5.0% per patient-year (SHIFT)Any time during therapyDiscontinue ivabradine if AF develops (per PI Section 5.2); manage rhythm/rate per AF guidelines.
Pediatric bradycardia (asymptomatic / symptomatic)6.8% / 4.1% (vs 2.4% / 0% placebo)During titrationPer PI: managed by dose titration without leading to study discontinuation. Consider 0.02 mg/kg BID if bradycardia at recommended initial dose.
Torsades de pointes / ventricular tachycardia / ventricular fibrillationPostmarketing — frequency unknownAny time, often with concomitant QT-prolonging drugsAvoid concomitant QT-prolonging agents; correct electrolytes; discontinue ivabradine.
Syncope / hypotensionPostmarketingAny timeHold dose; check HR and BP; reassess concomitant chronotropic and antihypertensive therapy.
Angioedema, urticaria, severe rashPostmarketing — rareAny timeDiscontinue immediately; standard hypersensitivity management.
Fetal toxicity (animal data)Embryo-fetal toxicity and cardiac teratogenicity at 1–3× human exposure in ratsFirst trimesterAvoid in pregnancy unless benefit clearly outweighs risk; ensure effective contraception in patients of reproductive potential.
Acute Overdose / Excessive Bradycardia

There is no specific antidote for ivabradine. Per the Corlanor PI Section 10, overdose may cause severe and prolonged bradycardia. Management is supportive: temporary cardiac pacing for poor haemodynamic tolerance, IV fluids, atropine, and IV beta-stimulating agents such as isoproterenol. Monitor for QT prolongation and torsades de pointes.

Discontinuation Treatment Discontinuation Rates
SHIFT Trial — Adults (HFrEF)
14% vs 13% placebo (NS)
All-cause AE-related withdrawal per Psotka 2016 review of SHIFT — not statistically significant. At 1 month, ~3% of Corlanor patients had withdrawn from study drug, primarily for bradycardia. Phosphenes led to discontinuation in <1% (per PI).
SIGNIFY Trial — Stable CAD (no HF)
13% vs 7% placebo (P<0.001)
Higher discontinuation than SHIFT, attributed to the higher dose used (up to 10 mg BID), concomitant verapamil/diltiazem, and the absence of a heart-failure population.
Reason for DiscontinuationIncidenceContext
Bradycardia (symptomatic or severe)Most common drug-specific cause~3% had withdrawn for bradycardia at 1 month in SHIFT.
New atrial fibrillationVariablePI mandates discontinuation if AF develops; rate not separately tabulated.
Phosphenes / visual disturbance<1% (per PI)Most patients tolerate; symptoms often resolve during continued treatment.
Other AEs (rash, hypotension, etc.)UncommonHeterogeneous and individually rare.
Managing the Most Common Pitfall — Atrial Fibrillation on Treatment

New-onset AF is the single most clinically important adverse event of ivabradine. Per Section 5.2 of the Corlanor PI, cardiac rhythm should be regularly monitored and ivabradine discontinued if atrial fibrillation develops. Patients should be counselled at every visit to report palpitations, an irregular pulse, chest pressure, or worsened breathlessness. Continuing ivabradine after persistent AF develops exposes the patient to risk without therapeutic benefit, since the drug is ineffective outside sinus rhythm.

Int

Drug Interactions

Ivabradine is metabolised exclusively by CYP3A4. The interaction profile is therefore dominated by CYP3A4 inhibitors (which raise levels and amplify bradycardia) and inducers (which lower levels and reduce efficacy). Pharmacodynamic interactions with other negative chronotropes are also clinically important. Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors are absolutely contraindicated with ivabradine per the Corlanor PI.

Contraindicated Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors
ExamplesPer Corlanor PI: azole antifungals (e.g., itraconazole), macrolide antibiotics (clarithromycin, telithromycin), HIV protease inhibitors (e.g., nelfinavir), and nefazodone.
MechanismStrong CYP3A4 inhibition substantially raises ivabradine plasma concentrations.
EffectMay exacerbate bradycardia and conduction disturbance; risk of severe sinus pauses.
ManagementPer PI: contraindicated. Use azithromycin instead of clarithromycin; choose non-CYP3A4 antifungal alternatives where possible.
Corlanor PI
Major Verapamil / Diltiazem (moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors + negative chronotropy)
MechanismModerate CYP3A4 inhibition plus additive AV-nodal blockade and negative chronotropy.
EffectPer Corlanor PI Section 5.3: increases ivabradine exposure and contributes to heart-rate lowering.
ManagementPer US PI: avoid concomitant use. Per EU SmPC: contraindicated. If absolutely essential, monitor HR closely.
Corlanor PI · EU SmPC
Major CYP3A4 inducers
ExamplesPer Corlanor PI: St. John’s wort, rifampicin, barbiturates, phenytoin.
MechanismCYP3A4 induction reduces ivabradine plasma concentrations.
EffectLoss of efficacy; HR may rise back toward baseline.
ManagementPer PI: avoid concomitant use. Patients are counselled in the medication guide to avoid St. John’s wort.
Corlanor PI
Major Beta-blockers
MechanismPharmacodynamic — additive heart-rate reduction.
EffectIncreased bradycardia risk. Most ivabradine patients are intentionally on a beta-blocker — interaction is expected and managed by HR titration.
ManagementOptimise beta-blocker first, then add ivabradine. Adjust dose by HR; aim 50–60 bpm.
Corlanor PI Section 7.2
Major Digoxin / Amiodarone (other negative chronotropes)
MechanismPharmacodynamic — additive bradycardia and conduction effects.
EffectPer Corlanor PI: digoxin exposure does not change with ivabradine (no PK interaction); the concern is additive negative chronotropy.
ManagementMonitor HR closely; reduce one or both if HR <50 bpm. Per PI Section 5.3: amiodarone is listed as a risk factor for bradycardia.
Corlanor PI
Moderate Grapefruit juice
MechanismModerate intestinal CYP3A4 inhibition.
EffectListed alongside diltiazem and verapamil as a moderate CYP3A4 inhibitor in Corlanor PI Section 7.1.
ManagementPer PI patient-counselling section: advise patients to avoid ingestion of grapefruit juice.
Corlanor PI
Moderate QT-prolonging drugs
MechanismPharmacodynamic — bradycardia from ivabradine + QT prolongation increases torsades risk.
EffectPer Corlanor PI Section 5.3: bradycardia may increase the risk of QT prolongation leading to severe ventricular arrhythmias including torsade de pointes, especially with concomitant QTc-prolonging drugs.
ManagementAvoid where possible; correct electrolytes; ECG monitoring.
Corlanor PI
Mon

Monitoring

Monitoring centres on heart rate (the therapeutic and toxicity endpoint) and rhythm (to detect new atrial fibrillation, the principal class effect). Routine biochemistry and ECG are needed at baseline and at each titration step.

  • Resting heart rate Baseline; 2 weeks after start; 2 weeks after each dose change; every clinic visit thereafter
    Routine
    Adult target 50–60 bpm. Pediatric target ≥20% HR reduction. Reduce dose if <50 bpm or symptomatic bradycardia; discontinue if <50 bpm despite minimum dose. Adult indication requires baseline HR ≥70 bpm.
  • Cardiac rhythm (palpitation history, ECG when triggered) Baseline; with new symptoms or irregular pulse
    Routine
    Per PI Section 5.2: regularly monitor cardiac rhythm. Discontinue Corlanor if atrial fibrillation develops. Counsel patients to report palpitations or irregular heartbeat.
  • 12-lead ECG Baseline; with new symptoms, dose change, or interacting drugs
    Routine
    Confirm sinus rhythm before initiation. Look for AV block, bundle branch block, sinus pauses. Per PI: 2nd-degree AV block is a precaution; 3rd-degree AV block without pacemaker is a contraindication.
  • Blood pressure Baseline; periodically
    Routine
    Per PI Section 4: clinically significant hypotension is a contraindication. Modest BP elevation (~1% excess vs placebo) reported in SHIFT.
  • Liver function tests Baseline; periodically
    Routine
    Severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C) is a contraindication; mild–moderate impairment requires no formal dose adjustment but warrants closer clinical observation.
  • Electrolytes (K, Mg) Baseline; with diuretic changes; periodically
    Routine
    Important if concomitant QT-prolonging drugs; correct any abnormality before continuing therapy.
  • Visual symptoms Every visit; especially in first 2 months
    Trigger-based
    Phosphenes are usually mild and transient. Counsel about caution while driving in changing light. Persistent or severe symptoms warrant ophthalmologic referral.
  • Pregnancy status (women of reproductive potential) Baseline and periodically
    Trigger-based
    Per Corlanor PI Section 8.1 and 8.3: animal studies show fetal toxicity and teratogenicity. Confirm effective contraception is in place; counsel before initiation.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications (Corlanor PI Section 4)

  • Acute decompensated heart failure.
  • Clinically significant hypotension.
  • Sick sinus syndrome, sinoatrial block, or third-degree AV block — unless a functioning demand pacemaker is present.
  • Clinically significant bradycardia.
  • Severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C).
  • Pacemaker dependence (heart rate maintained exclusively by the pacemaker).
  • Concomitant use of strong CYP3A4 inhibitors — examples per PI: azole antifungals (e.g., itraconazole), macrolide antibiotics (clarithromycin, telithromycin), HIV protease inhibitors (e.g., nelfinavir), and nefazodone.

Warnings & Precautions — Specialist Input or Caution

  • Atrial fibrillation (PI 5.2) — ivabradine increases the risk; discontinue if AF develops.
  • Bradycardia and conduction disturbances (PI 5.3) — risk increased by sinus node dysfunction, 1st- or 2nd-degree AV block, bundle branch block, ventricular dyssynchrony, and concomitant negative chronotropes (digoxin, diltiazem, verapamil, amiodarone).
  • Second-degree AV block — not recommended unless a functioning demand pacemaker is present.
  • Concomitant heart-rate-lowering calcium channel blockers (verapamil, diltiazem) — avoid combination per US PI; contraindicated per EU SmPC.
  • Demand pacemakers set ≥60 bpm — Corlanor not recommended (cannot achieve target HR <60 bpm).
  • Pregnancy (PI 5.1, 8.1) — fetal toxicity demonstrated in animal studies. Effective contraception is required during therapy and patients should be counselled before starting.
  • Lactation (PI 8.2) — breastfeeding not recommended (animal data show transfer to milk).
  • Severe renal impairment (CrCl <15 mL/min) — no data available; use with caution.
  • Mild–moderate hepatic impairment (PI 8.6) — no formal dose adjustment; PK similar to normal hepatic function.
  • Older adults / vulnerable patients — start at 2.5 mg twice daily.
FDA Warnings & Precautions Summary Fetal Toxicity, Atrial Fibrillation, and Bradycardia

Ivabradine does not carry a boxed warning. The Corlanor PI’s three principal Warnings and Precautions are: (1) fetal toxicity — based on animal teratogenicity at clinically relevant exposures, with cardiac malformations and complex anomalies of major arteries; effective contraception is required for patients of reproductive potential; (2) atrial fibrillation — patients should be regularly monitored and ivabradine discontinued if AF develops; and (3) bradycardia and conduction disturbances — risk is heightened by sinus node disease, AV block, bundle branch block, concomitant negative chronotropes, and CYP3A4 inhibitors.

Strong CYP3A4 inhibitors are absolutely contraindicated; concomitant heart-rate-lowering calcium channel blockers (diltiazem, verapamil) should be avoided per US PI (and are contraindicated per EU SmPC) because they both elevate ivabradine exposure and add to its bradycardic effect.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Ivabradine slows the heart rate without affecting how strongly the heart pumps. In heart failure, a slower heart rate gives the heart more time to fill between beats and reduces overall workload, lowering the chance of admission to hospital for worsening symptoms. Patients should understand that ivabradine is added to — not a replacement for — their other heart-failure medications. The drugs that improve survival (ACE inhibitors, ARNIs, beta-blockers, MRAs, and SGLT2 inhibitors) should not be reduced or stopped because of ivabradine.

How to Take

Take ivabradine twice a day, with food (for example with breakfast and dinner). Avoid grapefruit and grapefruit juice and St. John’s wort during therapy. If a dose is missed, do not take a replacement dose — take the next dose at the usual time. Do not stop ivabradine suddenly without speaking to the prescriber. The dose is adjusted according to the resting pulse measured in clinic; some patients find it useful to keep a simple log of their pulse and any new symptoms between visits.

Slow Heart Rate (Bradycardia)
Tell patient Ivabradine is meant to slow the heart, but if it goes too slow it can cause dizziness, fatigue, or lack of energy. The dose can be adjusted easily — these symptoms are not dangerous if reported promptly. In young children, signs of a slow heart rate may include poor feeding, difficulty breathing, or turning blue.
Call prescriber Pulse below 50 beats per minute (in adults), fainting or near-fainting, or new shortness of breath at rest — same-day review.
Irregular or Rapid Heartbeat (Atrial Fibrillation)
Tell patient Ivabradine slightly increases the chance of developing atrial fibrillation, an irregular heart rhythm. Signs include heart pounding or racing (palpitations), chest pressure, worsened shortness of breath, or near-fainting/fainting.
Call prescriber If the pulse becomes irregular, racing, or “fluttering,” or if shortness of breath suddenly worsens. The medication is usually stopped if atrial fibrillation is confirmed.
Visual Effects (Phosphenes)
Tell patient Some patients see brief flashes of brightness in part of their field of vision, usually triggered by sudden changes in light — for example when oncoming car headlights hit the eyes at night. These usually appear in the first two months and tend to settle on their own. Be careful when driving or operating machinery in situations where sudden changes in light can occur, especially when driving at night.
Call prescriber If visual symptoms are severe, persistent beyond a few months, or interfere with driving or daily activities.
Pregnancy and Contraception
Tell patient Ivabradine has caused birth defects in animal studies. Females who can become pregnant must use effective birth control during treatment. Breastfeeding is not recommended.
Call prescriber Right away if pregnancy is suspected, or before stopping contraception or planning pregnancy. The prescriber will discuss alternatives.
Drug and Food Interactions
Tell patient Avoid grapefruit juice and St. John’s wort. Many medicines interact with ivabradine, especially some antibiotics (clarithromycin, telithromycin), antifungals (itraconazole), the antiarrhythmics amiodarone and dronedarone, the heart-rate drugs verapamil and diltiazem, HIV medications (e.g., nelfinavir), nefazodone, and certain anti-seizure medications. Always tell new providers (including dentists) that you take ivabradine.
Call prescriber Before starting any new prescription, over-the-counter medicine, or herbal product. The prescriber can usually find a safe alternative.
Follow-up and Pulse Checks
Tell patient The dose will be adjusted at the two-week follow-up visit based on the resting pulse. Adults can be taught to take their own pulse at home — count beats over a full minute when at rest. Share the readings at clinic visits.
Call prescriber If a follow-up appointment is missed, or if the pulse consistently runs below 50 bpm or above 100 bpm at rest.
Oral Solution (Pediatric)
Tell caregiver Always use the calibrated oral syringe and medicine cup provided by the pharmacy — do not measure with the medicine cup alone. Discard any unused oral solution after each dose. Do not let the child self-administer the dose.
Call prescriber If the child spits out the dose or the dose is missed — do not give a replacement; give the next dose at the usual time and contact the prescriber if missed doses become frequent.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. CORLANOR (ivabradine) tablets and oral solution — full prescribing information. Amgen Inc., revised April 2019 (Reference ID: 4422121). FDA label PDF Most current US label including pediatric dosing approved in 2019; primary source for indications, dosing, contraindications, adverse-event data, and pharmacokinetics used throughout this monograph.
  2. CORLANOR (ivabradine) original FDA approval label (April 2015). FDA approval document Original adult approval — source for SHIFT trial adverse-event tabulation reproduced in current PI.
  3. PROCORALAN (ivabradine) — Summary of Product Characteristics. European Medicines Agency. EMA SmPC European labelling — includes the chronic stable angina indication that is not approved in the US, and additional pooled safety data including the contraindication for verapamil/diltiazem combination.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Swedberg K, Komajda M, Böhm M, et al. Ivabradine and outcomes in chronic heart failure (SHIFT): a randomised placebo-controlled study. Lancet. 2010;376(9744):875–885. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(10)61198-1 Pivotal RCT (n=6,558 randomised) supporting the adult HFrEF indication; reduction in composite of cardiovascular death or HF hospitalisation, driven by HF hospitalisation (HR 0.82, 95% CI 0.75–0.90).
  2. Fox K, Ford I, Steg PG, et al. Ivabradine for patients with stable coronary artery disease and left-ventricular systolic dysfunction (BEAUTIFUL): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Lancet. 2008;372(9641):807–816. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61170-8 Trial in CAD with LV systolic dysfunction; no benefit on primary composite (HR 1.00) but suggested heart-rate-related benefit in HR ≥70 bpm subgroup, informing SHIFT design.
  3. Fox K, Ford I, Steg PG, et al. Ivabradine in stable coronary artery disease without clinical heart failure (SIGNIFY). N Engl J Med. 2014;371(12):1091–1099. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1406430 Negative trial in CAD without HF (HR 1.08); higher discontinuation rate than SHIFT and confirmation of AF risk.
  4. Bonnet D, Berger F, Jokinen E, Kantor PF, Daubeney PEF. Ivabradine in Children With Dilated Cardiomyopathy and Symptomatic Chronic Heart Failure. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2017;70(10):1262–1272. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2017.07.725 Pediatric pivotal trial (n=116, 2:1 randomisation) supporting the 2019 FDA approval for children ≥6 months with HF due to dilated cardiomyopathy.
Guidelines
  1. Heidenreich PA, Bozkurt B, Aguilar D, et al. 2022 AHA/ACC/HFSA Guideline for the Management of Heart Failure. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2022;79(17):e263–e421. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2021.12.012 Current US heart-failure guideline — gives ivabradine a Class 2a, Level B-R recommendation in symptomatic chronic stable HFrEF (LVEF ≤35%, sinus rhythm, HR ≥70 bpm, on max-tolerated beta-blocker).
  2. McDonagh TA, Metra M, Adamo M, et al. 2021 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure. Eur Heart J. 2021;42(36):3599–3726. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehab368 European HF guideline — Class IIa recommendation for ivabradine in symptomatic HFrEF with sinus rhythm and HR ≥70 bpm despite GDMT.
  3. Sheldon RS, Grubb BP, Olshansky B, et al. 2015 Heart Rhythm Society expert consensus statement on the diagnosis and treatment of postural tachycardia syndrome, inappropriate sinus tachycardia, and vasovagal syncope. Heart Rhythm. 2015;12(6):e41–e63. doi:10.1016/j.hrthm.2015.03.029 Reference document for off-label use in inappropriate sinus tachycardia and POTS.
  4. Maddox TM, Januzzi JL Jr, Allen LA, et al. 2024 ACC Expert Consensus Decision Pathway for Treatment of Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2024;83(15):1444–1488. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2023.12.024 Updated ACC consensus pathway — situates ivabradine within current GDMT framework and reaffirms the SHIFT-population eligibility criteria.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. DiFrancesco D, Camm JA. Heart rate lowering by specific and selective I(f) current inhibition with ivabradine: a new therapeutic perspective in cardiovascular disease. Drugs. 2004;64(16):1757–1765. doi:10.2165/00003495-200464160-00003 Foundational reference on the molecular basis of If current inhibition and HCN channel pharmacology.
  2. Psotka MA, Teerlink JR. Ivabradine: Role in the Chronic Heart Failure Armamentarium. Circulation. 2016;133(22):2066–2075. doi:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.115.018094 Comprehensive review synthesising SHIFT, BEAUTIFUL, and SIGNIFY data, including discontinuation comparisons and AF risk meta-analyses.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations / Safety
  1. Martin RIR, Pogoryelova O, Koref MS, Bourke JP, Teare MD, Keavney BD. Atrial fibrillation associated with ivabradine treatment: meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Heart. 2014;100(19):1506–1510. doi:10.1136/heartjnl-2014-305482 Meta-analysis confirming AF risk is meaningfully higher than originally reported in product labelling.
  2. Tanboga IH, Topcu S, Aksakal E, et al. The Risk of Atrial Fibrillation With Ivabradine Treatment: A Meta-analysis With Trial Sequential Analysis of More Than 40000 Patients. Clin Cardiol. 2016;39(10):615–620. doi:10.1002/clc.22578 Larger meta-analysis (n >40,000) confirming an approximately 24% relative risk increase in AF with ivabradine.