Literature DB >> 16981859

Hormone replacement therapy in women with epilepsy: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study.

Cynthia L Harden1, Andrew G Herzog, Blagovest G Nikolov, Barbara S Koppel, Paul J Christos, Kristen Fowler, Douglas R Labar, W Allen Hauser.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Previous reports have suggested that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) could increase seizure activity in women with epilepsy. We sought to determine whether adding HRT to the medication regimen of postmenopausal women with epilepsy was associated with an increase in seizure frequency.
METHODS: This was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of the effect of HRT on seizure frequency in postmenopausal women with epilepsy, taking stable doses of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), and within 10 years of their last menses. After a 3-month prospective baseline, subjects were randomized to placebo, Prempro (0.625 mg of conjugated equine estrogens plus 2.5 mg of medroxyprogesterone acetate or CEE/MPA) daily, or double-dose CEE/MPA daily for a 3-month treatment period.
RESULTS: Twenty-one subjects were randomized after completing baseline. The subjects' ages ranged from 45 to 62 years (mean, 53 years; SD, +/-5), and the number of AEDs used ranged from none to three (median, one). Five (71%) of seven subjects taking double-dose CEE/MPA had a worsening seizure frequency of at least one seizure type, compared with four (50%) of eight taking single-dose CEE/MPA and one (17%) of six taking placebo (p = 0.05). An increase in seizure frequency of the subject's most severe seizure type was associated with increasing CEE/MPA dose (p = 0.008). An increase in complex partial seizure frequency also was associated with increasing CEE/MPA dose (p = 0.05). Two subjects taking lamotrigine had a decrease in lamotrigine levels of 25-30% while taking CEE/MPA.
CONCLUSIONS: CEE/MPA is associated with a dose-related increase in seizure frequency in postmenopausal women with epilepsy. CEE/MPA may decrease lamotrigine levels.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16981859     DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2006.00507.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsia        ISSN: 0013-9580            Impact factor:   5.864


  19 in total

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2.  More is not better: hormones for menopausal women with epilepsy?

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3.  Hormones, seizures, and lamotrigine: Oh, my!

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4.  Hormonal contraception is not associated with increased risk for seizures in the general population: results from a cohort study using The Health Improvement Network.

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5.  Gonadal status-dependent effects of in vivo β-estradiol administration to female rats on in vitro epileptiform activity induced by low [Mg2+]₀ in combined hippocampus-entorhinal cortex slices.

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7.  Antiepileptics and bone health.

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8.  The current state of postmenopausal hormone therapy: update for neurologists and epileptologists.

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Review 9.  Neurosteroids and their role in sex-specific epilepsies.

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Review 10.  The role of neurosteroids in the pathophysiology and treatment of catamenial epilepsy.

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