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Comparative effectiveness of antiepileptic drugs in patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis

Authors :
Androsova, G
Krause, R
Borghei, M
Wassenaar, M
Auce, P
Avbersek, A
Becker, F
Berghuis, B
Campbell, E
Coppola, A
Francis, B
Wolking, S
Cavalleri, GL
Craig, J
Delanty, N
Koeleman, BPC
Kunz, WS
Lerche, H
Marson, AG
Sander, JW
Sills, GJ
Striano, P
Zara, F
Sisodiya, SM
Depondt, C
Androsova, G
Krause, R
Borghei, M
Wassenaar, M
Auce, P
Avbersek, A
Becker, F
Berghuis, B
Campbell, E
Coppola, A
Francis, B
Wolking, S
Cavalleri, GL
Craig, J
Delanty, N
Koeleman, BPC
Kunz, WS
Lerche, H
Marson, AG
Sander, JW
Sills, GJ
Striano, P
Zara, F
Sisodiya, SM
Depondt, C
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis (MTLE-HS) is a common epilepsy syndrome that is often poorly controlled by antiepileptic drug (AED) treatment. Comparative AED effectiveness studies in this condition are lacking. We report retention, efficacy, and tolerability in a cohort of patients with MTLE-HS. METHODS: Clinical data were collected from a European database of patients with epilepsy. We estimated retention, 12-month seizure freedom, and adverse drug reaction (ADR) rates for the 10 most commonly used AEDs in patients with MTLE-HS. RESULTS: Seven hundred sixty-seven patients with a total of 3,249 AED trials were included. The highest 12-month retention rates were observed with carbamazepine (85.9%), valproate (85%), and clobazam (79%). Twelve-month seizure freedom rates varied from 1.2% for gabapentin and vigabatrin to 11% for carbamazepine. Response rates were highest for AEDs that were prescribed as initial treatment and lowest for AEDs that were used in a third or higher instance. ADRs were reported in 47.6% of patients, with the highest rates observed with oxcarbazepine (35.7%), topiramate (30.9%), and pregabalin (27.4%), and the lowest rates with clobazam (6.5%), gabapentin (8.9%), and lamotrigine (16.6%). The most commonly reported ADRs were lethargy and drowsiness, dizziness, vertigo and ataxia, and blurred vision and diplopia. SIGNIFICANCE: Our results did not demonstrate any clear advantage of newer versus older AEDs. Our results provide useful insights into AED retention, efficacy, and ADR rates in patients with MTLE-HS.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315680646
Document Type :
Electronic Resource