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- Educational Only: Not for clinical decision-making.
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Bedside Snapshot
- What it is: Ovine-derived digoxin-specific antibody fragments (Fab) that bind and neutralize free digoxin.
- Primary job: Reverse life-threatening digoxin toxicity (unstable brady/AV block, ventricular arrhythmias, shock, or severe hyperkalemia in acute overdose).
- Onset: Clinical improvement typically within 20–60 minutes; full response may take several hours.
- Dose thinking: Calculate by amount ingested or serum level × weight; if peri-arrest, give empiric vials rather than waiting on data.
Key warnings: Post-Fab digoxin levels are unreliable; potassium can swing from high to low; loss of digoxin’s inotropic/AV-nodal effects can unmask/worsen HF or AF.
Brand & Generic Names
- Generic Name: Digoxin immune Fab (ovine)
- Brand Names: DigiFab (U.S.); Digibind (historical)
Medication Class
Digoxin-specific antibody fragments (ovine); specific antidote for digoxin by binding free drug and forming inactive complexes eliminated renally.
Pharmacology
Mechanism of Action:
- High-affinity Fab fragments bind free digoxin, forming Fab–digoxin complexes.
- Reduces pharmacologically active (free) digoxin, creating a gradient that draws tissue-bound digoxin into plasma for neutralization.
- Rapid reversal of Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase inhibition improves AV conduction and stabilizes ventricular arrhythmias.
- Complexes are cleared primarily by the kidneys.
Pharmacokinetics:
- Route: IV only (reconstituted lyophilized powder; infuse over ~30 minutes; may give more rapidly in arrest).
- Onset: 20–60 minutes to initial clinical improvement; full effect over several hours.
- Distribution: Mostly intravascular/extracellular; Fab fragments do not cross cell membranes.
- Elimination: Renal clearance of free Fab and Fab–digoxin complexes; t½ ~15–20 hours with normal renal function; prolonged in renal impairment.
- Assays: Standard digoxin immunoassays read total (bound + unbound) after Fab and are not decision-useful.
Indications
- Life-threatening digoxin toxicity with hemodynamic instability or significant arrhythmias (ventricular arrhythmias, high-grade AV block, severe symptomatic bradycardia).
- Acute overdose with serum K⁺ ≥5.0–5.5 mEq/L or rapidly rising potassium.
- Known large acute ingestion (especially pediatric) with concerning symptoms/ECG changes.
- Severe chronic toxicity with significant dysrhythmias or syncope, especially in renal impairment.
- When markedly elevated steady-state digoxin levels plus worrisome ECG/clinical findings are present (in consultation with toxicology).
Dosing & Administration
Available Forms:
- Lyophilized powder for IV use; each vial contains 40 mg digoxin immune Fab and binds ≈0.5 mg of digoxin (approximate).
- Reconstitute with sterile water and dilute in normal saline per labeling.
Adult Dosing (consult toxicology/Poison Center):
| Scenario | Initial Dose (Vials) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Life-threatening toxicity (peri-arrest) | 10–20 vials IV | Give promptly; may push more rapidly if arrest/near-arrest. |
| Serious toxicity (unstable but not peri-arrest) | 10 vials IV | Assess response; redose if toxicity persists. |
Calculated Dosing Options:
- Based on amount ingested (acute): Vials ≈ (mg ingested × 0.8) ÷ 0.5. Example: 5 mg → (5 × 0.8)/0.5 = 8 vials.
- Based on serum level (chronic): Vials ≈ (digoxin ng/mL × weight kg) ÷ 100. Example: 4 ng/mL × 70 kg ÷ 100 = 2.8 → 3 vials.
Administration:
- Infuse over ~30 minutes when stable; in arrest/peri-arrest, administer as a slow IV push over several minutes.
- Monitor ECG, blood pressure, and potassium closely during and after administration.
Repeat Dosing: If toxicity persists/recurs (arrhythmias, hyperkalemia, shock), give additional vials guided by clinical status and toxicology.
Contraindications
Contraindications:
- Known severe hypersensitivity to digoxin immune Fab or ovine (sheep) proteins.
Precautions:
- Loss of therapeutic digoxin effect may worsen heart failure or rate control in AF.
- Rapid shift of potassium can lead to hypokalemia; check K⁺ frequently and replete cautiously.
- Renal impairment prolongs Fab–digoxin complex clearance; monitor longer for recurrence.
- Standard digoxin levels are not reliable after Fab; use clinical response and ECG.
- Allergy risk with ovine proteins; treat anaphylaxis per protocol if occurs.
Warning: In patients dependent on digoxin for inotropy, neutralization can precipitate decompensation—ensure vasopressors/inotropes are ready.
Adverse Effects
Common:
- Infusion reactions (flushing, chills, fever), nausea/vomiting.
- Hypokalemia after reversal of digoxin effect.
- Worsening HF symptoms in digoxin-dependent patients.
Serious:
- Anaphylaxis/severe hypersensitivity.
- Severe hypokalemia leading to arrhythmias if not monitored/repleted.
- Cardiogenic shock or decompensated HF in digoxin-dependent patients.
Special Populations
- Renal impairment: Expect prolonged effect and delayed complex clearance; monitor longer; repeat dosing may be needed.
- Pediatrics: Dosing uses same formulas; when unknown ingestion and unstable, 5–10 vials empirically with toxicology input.
- Pregnancy/lactation: Use when maternal benefit outweighs risk in life-threatening toxicity; protein nature suggests minimal oral bioavailability to infant.
- Older adults: Higher risk of chronic toxicity and renal impairment—lower threshold to treat when significant dysrhythmias present.
Monitoring
Clinical Monitoring:
- Continuous ECG for resolution of digoxin-related arrhythmias (e.g., bidirectional VT, high-grade AV block).
- Frequent vitals/hemodynamics; assess perfusion and mental status.
Laboratory Monitoring:
- Serum potassium (q1–2h initially in severe cases), magnesium, calcium.
- Renal function (BUN/Cr, urine output).
- Do not use post-Fab digoxin levels to guide therapy.
Clinical Pearls
Don’t wait on the level: In crashing patients with compatible ECG/clinical picture, treat empirically and call toxicology.
Post-Fab digoxin levels lie: Standard immunoassays read bound digoxin—use clinical response, not the number.
Mind potassium: Hyperkalemia can rapidly flip to hypokalemia after Fab—trend and replete carefully.
Digoxin-dependent patients: Be ready with vasopressors/inotropes and alternative rate control.
References
- 1. BTG International. (2023). DigiFab (digoxin immune Fab) prescribing information. https://www.digifab.com/hcp
- 2. Veltri, K., & Blank, R. (2024). Digoxin toxicity. StatPearls. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK556025/
- 3. Hoffman, R. S., Howland, M. A., Lewin, N. A., Nelson, L. S., & Goldfrank, L. R. (Eds.). (2019). Goldfrank’s toxicologic emergencies (11th ed.). McGraw-Hill.
- 4. BMJ Best Practice. (2024). Digoxin toxicity. https://bestpractice.bmj.com/topics/en-us/1041