Literature DB >> 12445957

Overtreatment in epilepsy: adverse consequences and mechanisms.

Emilio Perucca1.   

Abstract

The most important determinant of quality of life in patients with epilepsy is complete seizure control, and therefore this should be the ultimate goal of pharmacological therapy. Seizure freedom, or a reduction in seizure frequency, however, should not be sought at all costs, and the situation should never arise where a person with epilepsy is made to suffer more from the side effects of treatment than from the consequences of the underlying disease. Overtreatment is not uncommon in patients taking antiepileptic drugs, and it may occur in many forms and with a variety of mechanisms. Long-term use (or continuation) of anticonvulsant therapy in situations where it is not indicated (e.g. in children with simple febrile seizures, or in non-epileptic seizure-free patients who underwent brain surgery) constitutes a blatant case of overtreatment. Other forms of overtreatment include the use of unnecessarily fast dose escalation rates, which may expose the patient to potentially serious or severe side effects, or the prescription of unnecessarily high maintenance dosages. The latter occurrence may result from inadequate understanding of dose-response relationships, from misinterpretation of serum drug concentrations (e.g. targeting concentrations within the 'range' in patients who are well controlled at lower concentrations) or, at times, from failure to recognize a paradoxical increase in seizure frequency as a manifestation of drug toxicity. The most common form of overtreatment, however, involves the unnecessary use of combination therapy (polypharmacy) in patients who could be treated optimally with a single drug. Adverse effects associated with polypharmacy often result from undesirable drug-drug interactions. While pharmacokinetic interactions are somewhat predictable and can be minimized or controlled by monitoring serum drug concentrations and/or dose adjustment, pharmacodynamic interactions leading to enhanced neurotoxicity (as seen, for example, in some patients given a combination of lamotrigine and carbamazepine) can only be identified by careful clinical observation. There is evidence that not all antiepileptic drug combinations are equally adverse, and that the combined use of specific drugs (e.g. lamotrigine and valproic acid) may even exhibit an improved therapeutic index compared with either agent given alone, provided appropriate dose adjustments are made. Although the suggestion has been made that adverse effects are more likely to result from combining anticonvulsants having a similar mode of action, our knowledge of the pharmacology of individual agents is insufficient to allow a reliable prediction of the clinical effects of specific drug combinations.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12445957     DOI: 10.1016/s0920-1211(02)00182-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsy Res        ISSN: 0920-1211            Impact factor:   3.045


  14 in total

1.  Adverse antiepileptic drug effects.

Authors:  Warren T Blume
Journal:  Epilepsy Curr       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 7.500

Review 2.  Overtreatment in epilepsy: how it occurs and how it can be avoided.

Authors:  Emilio Perucca; Patrick Kwan
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 5.749

3.  Isobolographic profile of interactions between tiagabine and gabapentin: a preclinical study.

Authors:  Jarogniew J Luszczki; Stanislaw J Czuczwar
Journal:  Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol       Date:  2004-02-19       Impact factor: 3.000

4.  Chromatin remodeling, cell proliferation and cell death in valproic acid-treated HeLa cells.

Authors:  Marina Barreto Felisbino; Wirla M S C Tamashiro; Maria Luiza S Mello
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-12-19       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 5.  An Updated Overview on Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Recent Antiepileptic Drugs.

Authors:  Shery Jacob; Anroop B Nair
Journal:  Drugs R D       Date:  2016-12

6.  Lacosamide and sodium channel-blocking antiepileptic drug cross-titration against levetiracetam background therapy.

Authors:  M Baulac; W Byrnes; P Williams; S Borghs; E Webster; M De Backer; P Dedeken
Journal:  Acta Neurol Scand       Date:  2016-10-06       Impact factor: 3.209

7.  Epilepsy as a dynamic disease: A Bayesian model for differentiating seizure risk from natural variability.

Authors:  Sharon Chiang; Marina Vannucci; Daniel M Goldenholz; Robert Moss; John M Stern
Journal:  Epilepsia Open       Date:  2018-04-20

8.  Sub-additive (antagonistic) interaction of lacosamide with lamotrigine and valproate in the maximal electroshock-induced seizure model in mice: an isobolographic analysis.

Authors:  Jarogniew J Łuszczki; Maria Kondrat-Wróbel; Mirosław Zagaja; Sławomir Karwan; Hubert Bojar; Zbigniew Plewa; Magdalena Florek-Łuszczki
Journal:  Pharmacol Rep       Date:  2020-06-07       Impact factor: 3.024

9.  Interactions among Lacosamide and Second-Generation Antiepileptic Drugs in the Tonic-Clonic Seizure Model in Mice.

Authors:  Katarzyna Załuska-Ogryzek; Paweł Marzęda; Paula Wróblewska-Łuczka; Magdalena Florek-Łuszczki; Zbigniew Plewa; Hubert Bojar; Dorota Zolkowska; Jarogniew J Łuszczki
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-05-24       Impact factor: 5.923

Review 10.  Gene Environment Interactions in the Etiology of Neural Tube Defects.

Authors:  Richard H Finnell; Carlo Donato Caiaffa; Sung-Eun Kim; Yunping Lei; John Steele; Xuanye Cao; Gabriel Tukeman; Ying Linda Lin; Robert M Cabrera; Bogdan J Wlodarczyk
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-05-10       Impact factor: 4.599

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.