Literature DB >> 11139806

New anti-epileptic drugs.

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Abstract

Epilepsy represents the most common serious neurological disorder, with a prevalence of 0.4 - 1%. Approximately 30% of patients are resistant to currently available drugs. New anti-epileptic drugs are needed to treat refractory epilepsy, improve upon current therapies, improve the prognosis of epilepsy and to prevent the epileptogenic process. Designing compounds with specific physiological targets would seem the most rational method of anti-epileptic drug development, but results from this approach have been disappointing; the widespread screening of compounds in animal models has been much more fruitful. Older methods of animal screening have used acute seizure models, which bear scant relationship to the human condition. More modern methods have included the development of animal models of chronic epilepsy; although more expensive, it is likely that these models will be more sensitive and more specific in determining anti-epileptic efficacy. In this review, we consider the possible physiological targets for anti-epileptic drugs, the animal models of epilepsy, problems with clinical trials and ten promising anti-epileptic drugs in development (AWD 131-138, DP16 (DP-VPA), ganaxolone, levetiracetam, losigamone, pregabalin, remacemide, retigabine, rufinamide and soretolide). Perhaps the most important advances will come about from the realisation that epilepsy is a symptom, not a disease. Preclinical testing should be used to determine the spectrum of epilepsies that a drug can treat, and to direct later clinical trials, which need to select patients based on carefully defined epilepsy syndromes and aetiologies. Not only will such an approach improve the sensitivity of clinical trials, but also will lead to a more rational basis on which to treat.

Entities:  

Year:  1999        PMID: 11139806     DOI: 10.1517/13543784.8.10.1497

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Expert Opin Investig Drugs        ISSN: 1354-3784            Impact factor:   6.206


  6 in total

Review 1.  Future prospects for the drug treatment of epilepsy.

Authors:  A Nicolson; J P Leach
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 5.749

2.  Chronic deficit in the expression of voltage-gated potassium channel Kv3.4 subunit in the hippocampus of pilocarpine-treated epileptic rats.

Authors:  Luis F Pacheco Otalora; Frank Skinner; Mauro S Oliveira; Bianca Farrell; Massoud F Arshadmansab; Tarun Pandari; Ileana Garcia; Leslie Robles; Gerardo Rosas; Carlos F Mello; Boris S Ermolinsky; Emilio R Garrido-Sanabria
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2010-10-21       Impact factor: 3.252

3.  Retigabine: in partial seizures.

Authors:  Greg L Plosker; Lesley J Scott
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 5.749

Review 4.  Levetiracetam. A review of its adjunctive use in the management of partial onset seizures.

Authors:  M Dooley; G L Plosker
Journal:  Drugs       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 9.546

Review 5.  Pregabalin: as adjunctive treatment of partial seizures.

Authors:  Greg Warner; David P Figgitt
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 5.749

6.  Pregabalin versus gabapentin in partial epilepsy: a meta-analysis of dose-response relationships.

Authors:  Philippa Delahoy; Sally Thompson; Ian C Marschner
Journal:  BMC Neurol       Date:  2010-11-01       Impact factor: 2.474

  6 in total

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