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Flumazenil for the Treatment of Refractory Hypersomnolence: Clinical Experience with 153 Patients

Authors :
Vincent LaBarbera
Donald L. Bliwise
Lynn Marie Trotti
David B. Rye
Catherine Koola
Prabhjyot Saini
Source :
Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. 12(10)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Patients with central disorders of hypersomnolence sometimes do not achieve satisfactory symptom control with currently available wake-promoting medications. Based on the finding that the cerebrospinal fluid from some patients with hypersomnolence demonstrates potentiation of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-A receptors in excess of that of controls, a finding that reverses with flumazenil, we initiated prescribing compounded flumazenil to carefully selected, treatment-refractory hypersomnolent patients.This retrospective chart review evaluated the first 153 consecutive patients treated with transdermal and/or sublingual flumazenil by physicians at our center from 2013 through January 2015.Patients were 35.5 y old (± 14.4) and 92 (60.1%) were women. Mean Epworth Sleepiness Scale scores prior to flumazenil were 15.1 (± 4.5) despite prior or current treatment with traditional wake-promoting therapies. Symptomatic benefit was noted by 96 patients (62.8%), with a mean reduction in Epworth Sleepiness Scale score of 4.7 points (± 4.7) among responders. Of these, 59 remained on flumazenil chronically, for a mean of 7.8 mo (± 6.9 mo). Female sex and presence of reported sleep inertia differentiated flumazenil responders from nonresponders. Adverse events were common, but often did not result in treatment discontinuation. Serious adverse events included a transient ischemic attack and a lupus vasculopathy, although whether these events occurred because of flumazenil administration is unknown.This chart review demonstrates that sublingual and transdermal flumazenil provided sustained clinical benefit to 39% of patients with treatment-refractory hypersomnolence. Prospective, controlled studies of this GABA-A receptor antagonist for the treatment of hypersomnolence are needed.A commentary on this article appears in this issue on page 1321.

Details

ISSN :
15509397
Volume :
12
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....648749633fa65b1dc866573b85002bc0