Title: Drug treatment in Epilepsy
1Drug treatment in Epilepsy
- Martin Reed Pharmacy QEPH
- Miriam Wilcher
2Treatment Goals
- No seizures
- No side effects
- Monotherapy
- Once daily dosing
- No blood tests
3What actually happens
- 70 seizure free with one drug
- With careful monitoring and adjustment
- 5 to 10 seizure free with two or more drugs
- 20 still have seizures
4Principals of pharmacological treatment 1
- Use the right drug for the seizure type
- Use one drug and increase the dose until a
therapeutic effect is gained or toxicity appears
(maximum tolerated dose) - Monitor treatment including blood levels
- If required add a second drug.
- If a response consider slowly removing the first
drug
5Principals of pharmacological treatment 2
- If monotherapy fails use two drugs
- Review and replace the combinations used
- Add in a third drug if necessary
- Be prepared to accept that a significant
reduction in seizure frequency maybe as good as
it gets
6Compliance
- For a drug to be effective it has to be taken
- Non compliance is an important issue in poor
control - Patients must be fully involved in decisions
- Patients views must be respected
- Better knowledge and respect leads to better
compliance
7Why dont patients comply?
- Poor communication
- Poor memory
- Poor understanding of instructions
- Mis-information
- Side effects
- Poor dose regimes
- Difficult to swallow/nasty taste medication
- Good information makes medicines work
8When should levels be monitored?
- Uncontrolled seizures
- Recurrence of seizures
- Side effects
- Assessment of compliance
- Confirmation of desired results
- Assessment of therapy when seizures infrequent
- Minor dose adjustments
- Concurrent illness
9But
- Blood concentrations are a guide only
- Timing of sample important
- Never look at the blood level in isolation
- Always consider blood level with respect to
- Side effects
- Seizure frequency
10Modes of action
- 1 Suppress action potential
- Sodium channel blocker or modulator
- Potassium channel opener
- 2 Enhance GABA transmission
- GABA uptake inhibitor
- GABA mimetics
- 3 Suppression of excitatory transmission
11Sodium channels
- Main target for many drugs
- Sodium channels are responsible for the rising
phase of the action potential in excitable cells
and membranes - Examples
Phenytoin Carbamazepine Oxcarbazepine Lamotrigine
12Potassium channels
- Very diverse group of ion channels
- Responsible for resting potential
- Influences excitability of neurones
- Determine potential width
13GABA A and GABA B
- Inhibitory neurotransmitter
- GABA A post synaptic 7 classes
- Dependent upon chloride and bicarbonate ions
- GABA B pre and post synaptic
14GABA A Transmission
- Barbiturates
- primidone
- Benzodiazepines
- Clobazam, clonazepam, diazapam
- Tiagabine
- Vigabatrin
15Calcium channels
- Four main types
- L, P/G, N high voltage
- T low voltage
- Mono amines modulate the circuit
- Nifedipine blocks L
16Calcium channels
- T type
- Ethosuximide, zonisamide
- L type
- Barbiturates, felbamate
- N type
- Lamotrigine, barbiturates , oxcarbazepine
- P/Q type
- Lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine
17Glutamate
- Major excitatory transmitter
- Mainly intracellular
- Three receptor types
- NMDA
- Associated with sodium and calcium ions
- Magnesium ions block
- Other messengers act at NMDA site
- AMPA and kainate receptors
- metabotropic
18Other Mechanisms
- Valproic acid
- Gabapentin
- Piracetam
- Levetiracetam
19BUT
- Why do persistent alterations in neuronal
circuits or excitability result in a paroxysmal
disorder like epilepsy?
20Sites of action 1
- Valproate, vigabatrin, tiagabine increase GABA by
inhibiting reuptake (2) and preventing breakdown
within the cell (3) - Benzodiazepines bind to GABA receptors (4)
- Phenobarbital opens chloride channels (4)
- Topiramate blocks sodium channels and is a GABA
agonist at some sites (4)
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22Other modes of action
- Gabapentin, has similar structure to GABA
- Phenytoin,carbamazepine,oxcarbazepine,
lamotrigine, act on sodium channels - Ethosuximide, reduces calcium currents
- Levetiracetam, has neuroprotective effect
- Topiramate, acetazolamide, are carbonic anhydrase
inhibitors - Zonisamide has weak carbonic anhydrase activity
23Choice of antiepileptic 1
Seizure type Drug of choice Alternatives
Partial simple Partial complex Carbamazepine Phenytoin Valproate Lamotrigine Gabapentin Levetiracetam Topiramate Tiagabine Oxcarbazepine Phenobarbital
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25Choice of antiepileptic 2
Seizure type Drug of choice Alternatives
Generalised tonic clonic Carbamazepine Phenytoin Valproate Lamotrigine Topiramate Phenobarbital
Absence Ethosuximide Valproate Lamotrigine Clonazepam
Atypical absence Atonic, myoclonic Valproate Clonazepam
26Carbamazepine 1
- Dose
- 200mg to 1600mg a day in divided doses
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- 4 to 12 micrograms per ml
- 20 to 50 micromoles/L
- Poor correlation between dose and plasma level in
children - Widely distributed in tissues, found in placenta
and breast milk (40 plasma level) - t MAX 4 to 8 hours
- Indicated for
- All forms of seizures except absence and
myoclonic seizures
27Carbamazepine 2
- Common side effects
- Headache, drowsiness, dizziness, ataxia, double
vision, - Serious effects
- Osteomalacea, folate deficency, peripheral
neuropathy, water retention, hyponatraemia, rash,
blood dyscrasias-leucopaenia - Comments
- Drug of choice for partial seizures, primary or
secondary generalised tonic-clonic seizures - Auto induces own metabolism slow escalation
- Variable half life 25-65 initially 8-18
chronically - Active metabolite
- Many drug interactions as enzyme inducer
- Can make myoclonus worse or appear to cause it
28Oxcarbazepine
- Dose
- 600mg to 2400mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- Indicated for
- Partial seizures with or without secondarily
generalised tonic clonic seizures - Common side effects
- As for carbamazepine less severe
- Comments
- Fewer drug interactions than carbamazepine
29Clonazepam 1
- Dose
- 4 to 8 mg a day
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- 0.63 to 2.2 mmol/litre
- Indicated for
- Refractory absence and myoclonic seizures
30Clonazepam 2
- Common side effects
- Sedation, ataxia, behaviour problems,
hyperactivity - Comments
- Used for partial seizures
- Half life 18 to 50 hours
- Tolerance develops in 30
31Clobazam
- Dose
- 20 to 60mg a day
- Indicated for
- Refractory partial seizures
- Cluster seizures
- Seizures connected with periods
- Common side effects
- As for clonazepam
- Comments
- As for clonazepam
32Ethosuximide 1
- Dose
- 500mg to 1500 mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- 300 -700 micromoles/L
- 50 -100 micrograms/L
- Indicated for
- Simple absence seizures
33Ethosuximide 2
- Common side effects
- Gastro intestinal upset, nausea, drowsiness,
headache, behavioural changes, hiccups, skin
rashes - Comments
- Half life 50 to 60 hours in adults
- 30 to 40 hours in children
- Administered tds to reduce gastric upset
34Gabapentin 1
- Dose
- 300mg to 2400mg daily (needs tds dose)
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- Not established
- Indicated for
- Adjunctive treatment for refractory partial
seizures
35Gabapentin 2
- Common side effects
- Drowsiness, dizziness, fatigue, ataxia, tremor,
diplopia, nausea and vomiting - Comments
- Excreted unchanged 95 in urine
- Only 60 of dose absorbed
- Unaffected by food
- Seizure frequency may increase
- No common drug interactions
- Comparatively safe in overdose
36Lamotrigine 1
- Dose
- 100 to 200mg monotherapy or with valproate
- 200mg to 400mg with enzyme inducers
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- Not clinically relevant
- Indicated for
- All forms of seizures
37Lamotrigine 2
- Common side effects
- Dizziness, ataxia, double vision, nausea,
somnolence - Rash (worse in children) less if slow escalation
- Comments
- Complex interaction with valproate very slow
escalation needed - Indicated for partial seizures and secondarily
generalised tonic clonic seizures - Half life 25 hours shorter with enzyme inducers
- Excreted in breast milk
- Reasonably safe in overdose (10x)
38Levetiracetam
- Dose
- 500mg to 3000mg
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- Not relevant
- Indicated for
- Partial seizures, Generalised absences
- Common side effects
- Nausea, drowsiness, anorexia, headache, rash,
- Very rarely leucopenia
- Comments
- No drug interactions described
39Phenobarbital 1
- Dose
- 90 to 600mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- 60 to 160 micromoles /L
- 20 to 40 micrograms/ml
- Indicated for
- All forms of seizures except absence seizures
40Phenobarbital 2
- Common side effects
- Sedation (tolerance develops), headache,
hyperkinesia (old young) slurred speech, skin
reactions, cognitive impairment - Comments
- Dependency needs very, very slow withdrawal
- Interactions - increases valproate effect
- -enzyme inducer, reduces effects of many other
drugs - Half life 2 to 7 days
- Can cause folate deficiency
41Primidone
- Dose
- 50mg to 1500mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- No clinical relevance
- Indicated for
- All form of seizures except absence seizures
- Common side effects
- As for phenobarbital
- Comments
- Metabolised to phenobarbital and
phenyethylmalonamide (PEMA)
42Phenytoin 1
- Dose
- 150mg to 600mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- 40 to 40micromoles/L
- 10 to 20 micrograms/ml
- t MAX 4 to 12 hours
- Indicated for
- All forms of seizures except absence seizures
- Common side effects
- Dizziness, nausea, skin rashes, gum tenderness,
hirsutism in females, peripheral neuropathy,
tremor, ataxia, osteomalacia, folate deficiency
43Phenytoin 2
- Comments
- Zero order kinetics small increase in dose can
cause large increase in levels - Plasma levels (TDM) mandatory
- Many drug interactions including other AEDs
- Enzyme inducer
- Metabolised in the liver
- Half life 22 hours
44Sodium valproate/valproic acid 1
- Dose
- 600mg to 2400mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- 300 to 600 micromoles/L
- 50 to 100 micrograms/ml
- But of little clinical value
- Indicated for
- All forms of epilepsy
45Valproic acid/sodium valproate 2
- Common side effects
- Nausea, gastrointestinal irritation, drowsiness,
ataxia, weight gain also anorexia, alopecia. - Rare but serious impaired liver function
- thrombocytopenia
- Comments
- Half life 10 to 20 hours, reduced with
polytherapy - GI upset reduced by enteric coating
- Interacts with lamotrigine and phenobarbital
46Tiagabine 1
- Dose
- 30 to 45 mg daily with enzyme inducers
- 15 to 30mg daily without enzyme inducers
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- Not relevant
- Indicated for
- Adjunctive treatment for refractory partial
seizures - Common side effects
- Diarrhoea, dizziness, tiredness, concentration
difficulties, emotional changes, speech
impairment.
47Tiagabine 2
- Comments
- Short half life (4 to 10 hours)
- Used when add on therapy is required
- Efficacy reduced by enzyme inducing AEDs
- Reduces plasma concentration of sodium valproate
48Topiramate 1
- Dose
- 200mg to 800mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- Not clinically relevant
- Indicated for
- Adjunctive treatment for refractory partial
seizures - Common side effects
- Nausea, abdominal pain, anorexia, cog.
impairment, mood disorders (can be aggressive in
LD)
49Topiramate 2
- Comments
- Watch for weight loss and depressive psychosis
- Ensure adequate hydration increased risk of
kidney stones. Avoid carbonic anhydrase
inhibitors e.g. acetazolamide - Half life 18 to 30 hours reduced where given with
enzyme inducing drugs
50Vigabatrin 1
- Dose
- 2000mg to 3000mg daily
- Therapeutic plasma concentration
- Not clinically relevant
- Indicated for
- Adjunctive treatment for refractory generalised
tonic clonic and partial seizures
51Vigabatrin 2
- Common side effects
- Drowsiness, confusion, irritability, fatigue
- Visual field defects
- Psychotic experiences
- Comments
- Irreversible inhibitor of GABA transaminase
- Short half life irrelevant to dosing regime
52Zonisamide 1
- Dose
- 100mg/day increased every 2 weeks to max of 400mg
- higher doses in presence of enzyme inducers
- Peak plasma after 2-6hours
- delayed by food but total absorbed not affected.
- Steady state 14days
- Low plasma protein binding but bound to
erythrocytes - Indicated for partial seizures
53Zonisamide 2
- Contra indications sulfonamide hypersensitvity
- Cautions
- Renal impairment - excreted in urine
- Tendancy to kidney stones - advise plenty of
fluids - Co-administration with enzyme inducers
- Avoid in pregnancy possibly teratogenic
- Very Common Side effects
- - Agitation, confusion, dizziness, somnolence,
double vision - Common side effects
- - Diarrhoea, nausea, anorexia, rash
54Zonisamide 3
- Serious but rare effects
- Blood dyscrasias, panreatitis
- Hallucinations, psychosis
- Comment
- - New drug - monitor
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56Drug history
- Phenobarbitone 1912
- Phenytoin 1938
- Primidone 1952
- Ethosuximide 1955
- Carbamazepine 1965
- Sod. Valproate 1973
- Valproic acid 1993
- Clonazepam 1974
- Clobazam 1979
- Vigabatrin 1989
- Lamotrigine 1991
- Gabapentin 1993
- Tiagabine
- Topiramate 1995
- Levetiracetam 2000
- Fosphenytoin 2001
- Zonisamide 2005
57others
- Felbamate
- Aplastic anaemia
- Liver failure
- Remacemide
- Piracetam
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59Drugs to be used with care
- Aminophylline
- Amphetamines
- Analgesics
- Antibiotics
- Antidepressants
- Antimuscarinics
- Antipsychotics
- Baclofen
- Bupropion
- Donepezil etc
- Cyclosporin
- Cocaine
- Isoniazid
- Lignocaine
- Mefloquine
- NSAIDs
- Opioids
- Oral contraceptives
- Vincristine
60Web sites
- www.BNF.org
- www.e-epilepsy.org.uk/
- www.medicines.org.uk