| Literature DB >> 22003298 |
Mallik Angalakuditi1, Nupur Angalakuditi.
Abstract
AIMS: To perform a systematic literature review of studies in peer reviewed journals on the epidemiology, economics, and treatment patterns of epilepsy in selected countries in emerging markets.Entities:
Keywords: economics; emerging markets; epidemiology; epilepsy; guidelines; seizures; treatment patterns
Year: 2011 PMID: 22003298 PMCID: PMC3191871 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S24966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Prevalence of epilepsy in emerging markets
| Saudi Arabia | Adults and children | 1989 | NR | 6.54 | Al Rajeh et al |
| Members of the Arab League (Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Sudan, Djibouti, Comoros, Somalia, Eritrea, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Oman, Bahrain, and Yemen) and The Palestine territory (Gaza stripand West Bank) | Adults and children | 1950–2008 | Libya 2.3 | NR | Benamer and Grosset |
| Argentina | Children | 1991 | 3.2 | 2.6 | Somoza et al |
| Argentina | Adults and children | 1991 | 6.2 | 3.8 | Melcon et al |
| Argentina | Children | 1994 | 71.9 | 64.8 | Somoza et al |
| China/Hong Kong | Children | 1997 | NR | 1.52 | Kwong et al |
| China/Hong Kong | Adults | 2002 | NR | 1.54 | Fong et al |
| China/Hong Kong | Adults and children | 1982–2002 | NR | 4.5 | Hui et al |
| Colombia | Adults and children | 1995–1996 | 11.3 | 10.1 | Velez and Eslava-Cobos |
| India | Children | 1991 | NR | 2.33 | Shah et al |
| Russia | Adults and children | 2003–2008 | NR | 3.4 | Halász et al |
| Taiwan | Adults | 2001 | 3.14 | 2.77 | Chen et al |
| Turkey | Adults and children | 1999–2000 | 0.08 | NR | Onal et al |
| Turkey | Children | 1996 | 0.08 | NR | Serdaroğlu et al |
| Turkey | Adults and children | 2004–2005 | 12.2 | 8.5 | Calisir et al |
| Turkey | Adults and children | 2000 | 6.0 | 5.0 | Velioglu et al |
Abbreviation: NR, not reported.
Figure 1Literature review flow diagram.
Societal perspective – economic data
| 2008 | China | Adults and children | ↓103¥ (16 USD) | Shanghai-mean costs of health care contact with town doctors | Ding et al |
| ↓12¥ (2 USD) | Ningxia-health care costs to town doctors | ||||
| ↑10¥ (1.5 USD) | Ningxia-time costs to town doctors | ||||
| 2009 | China | Adults and children | 1968¥ (289 USD) | Loss of productivity | Hong et al |
| 2001 | India | Adults | 147 rupees (3 USD) | Drug monitoring service to hospital | Rane et al |
| 22 rupees (0.50 USD) | Drug monitoring service to hospital per seizure prevented |
Abbreviations: ¥, Chinese yuan, renminbi; USD, United States dollar; ↑, increased; ↓, decreased.
Patient perspective – economic data
| 2008 | Bulgaria | Adults | ≤2 AEs | 339€ ($487) | Balabanov et al |
| ≥2 AEs | 806€ ($1158) | ||||
| CBZ patients >26 weeks between seizures | 386€ ($555) | ||||
| <26 weeks between seizures | 810€ ($1164) | ||||
| CBZ ≥ 50% seizure reduction | 403€ ($579) | ||||
| CBZ ≤ 50% seizure reduction | 931€ ($1338) | ||||
| 2008 | China | Adults and children | Shanghai: 1-year expenses per PB treated patient | 1494¥ decreased to 92¥ at 1 year ($234 to $14) | Ding et al |
| Ningxia: 1-year expenses per PB treated patient | 213¥ decreased to 46¥ at 1 year ($33 to $7) | ||||
| 2009 | China | Adults and children | Direct medical care costs | 2529¥ ($395) | Hong et al |
| Antiepileptic drugs | 1651¥ ($258) | ||||
| Non-medical direct costs | 756¥ ($118) | ||||
| Annual cost for epilepsy/patient | 5253¥ ($821) | ||||
| 2001 | India | Adults | TDM cost per patient | 147
| Rane et al |
| TDM cost patient charged | 30
| ||||
| TDM cost to hospital per seizure prevented | 22
| ||||
| TDM cost to patient per seizure prevented | 5
| ||||
| 2005 | India | Adults | Cost of drug at entry – monotherapy | 2276
| Thomas et al |
| Cost of drug at entry – polytherapy | 3629
| ||||
| Cost of drug at last follow-up – monotherapy | 1898
| ||||
| Cost of drug at last follow-up – polytherapy | 4929
| ||||
| 2006 | Mexico | Adults and children | Annual healthcare cost per patient | 2646 USD | Garcia-Contreras et al |
Note: USD conversion rates as at August 21, 2011.
Abbreviations: ¥, Chinese yuan, renminbi; USD, United States dollar; €, euro; PB, phenobarbital; TDM, therapeutic drug monitoring.
Clinical trials of therapies for epilepsy
| Brazil | Clobazam | Partial onset patients with refractory epilepsy | Retrospective | Following treatment, 7% of patients were seizure free, 49% had ≥50% of improvement in seizure control, 40% had <50% of improvement in seizure control. | Montenegro et al |
| Brazil | Clobazam as add-on agent | Generalized | Retrospective | Following treatment, 20% of patients were seizure-free, 25% had more than 75% improvement in seizure control, 10% had more than 50% and 26% were non responders to treatment. | Montenegro et al |
| China | Phenobarbital | Generalized | Prospective observational | Following treatment, 78% of the patients had a 50% or greater reduction in seizure frequency and 43% were seizure free. | Liu et al |
| China | Topiramate monotherapy vs add-on agent | Generalized and Partial onset | Prospective observational | The rate of AEs was significantly higher with use of topiramate as monotherapy than as adjunctive therapy. | Lu et al |
| China | Zonisamide as add-on agent | Partial onset refractory epilepsy | RCT | Zonisamide showed significantly greater efficacy compared with placebo. | Lu et al |
| China | Topiramate monotherapy vs add-on agent | Generalized | Retrospective | The percentage of seizure-free patients was 69% in the topiramate monotherapy group and 42% in the topiramate add-on group. | Lu et al |
| China | Valproate and Primidone | Partial onset patients unresponsive to carbamazepine | Prospective observational | Significantly more patients on Valproate (51%) achieved a greater than 50% seizure reduction than on Primidone (34%). | Sun et al |
| China | Levetiracetam as add-on agent | Partial onset | RCT | Levetiracetam significantly decreased weekly partial-onset seizure frequency over placebo by 27%. | Wu et al |
| China | Levetiracetam as add-on agent | Partial onset | RCT | The proportion of patients with a minimum of 50% reduction in partial seizure frequency occurred in 46% of the treatment group, compared with 39% of the placebo group. | Xiao et al |
| Czech Republic | Levetiracetam | Generalized and partial onset | Retrospective | A significant decrease in the number of seizures occurred after 6 months of treatment. | Tlusta et al |
| India | Phenobarbital | Generalized and partial onset elderly population | Retrospective | One year remission rate was 56%. | Tran et al |
| India | Phenobarbital or phenytoin | Generalized and partial onset | Prospective observational | The proportion with remission at each of four successive years of follow-up ranged from 58% to 66% for patients who were drug compliant and who had a lifetime total of 30 or fewer generalized tonic-clonic seizures. | Mani et al |
| India | Gabapentin or Lamotrigine | Partial onset patients refractory to carbamazepine | RCT | The average frequency of partial seizures decreased significantly in both groups. | Sethi et al |
| Multiple | Lacosamide | Partial onset | RCT | The median percent reduction in seizure frequency was 21% for placebo, 35% for lacosamide 200 mg/day, and 36% for 400 mg/day. | Halász et al |
| Multiple | Eslicarbazepine acetate | Partial onset patients refractory to treatment with one or two concomitant AEDs | RCT | Seizure frequency was significantly lower in the treatment groups as compared in the treatment groups as compared to placebo. | Elger et al |
| Multiple | Eslicarbazepine acetate | Partial onset | Prospective observational | Seizure frequency decreased by 39% during the first 4 weeks and between 48% and 56% thereafter. | Halász et al |
| Multiple | Valproate | Generalized and partial onset | Prospective observational | At 6 months, 77% of subjects were seizure free. | Jedrzejczak et al |
| Multiple | Valproate | Partial onset | Prospective observational | At 6 months, 87% of patients became seizure free. | Deleu et al |
| Multiple | Levetiracetam as add-on agent | Partial onset | Prospective observational | 44% of patients had a ≥50% reduction in seizure frequency, with a median reduction of 46%. 18% became seizure free during treatment. | Kwan et al |
| Multiple | Oxcarbazepine | Partial onset | RCT | The median reduction in seizure frequency was 26%, 40%, 50%, or 8% for patients receiving 600, 1200, or 2400 mg/d treatment or placebo, respectively. Of patients in the 600, 1200, or 2400 mg/d treatment groups, 27%, 42%, and 50% respectively, had more than 50% reduction in seizure frequency compared with 13% for placebo. | Barcs et al |
| Poland | Tiagabine as add-on agent | Generalized and partial onset | Prospective observational | The mean initial seizure rate per patient decreased following treatment. | Chmielewska and Stelmasiak |
| Poland | Tiagabine as add-on agent | Generalized and partial onset | Prospective observational | 71% patients had a ≥50% decrease in seizure frequency compared with baseline. | Jedrzejczak |
| Poland | Topiramate as add-on agent with Carbamazepine | Partial onset | Retrospective | Most AEs with adjunctive therapy were transient. | Majkowski et al |
| Poland | Lamotrigine vs Valproate | Generalized | Retrospective | Valproate showed comparable efficacy in all syndromes where lamotrigine showed better efficacy in childhood epilepsy. | Mazurkiewicz-Beldzinska et al |
| Russia | Pregabalin as add-on agent | Partial onset | Prospective observational | The patients receiving treatment showed a significant reduction at the end of the first month in the number of seizures. | Bondarenko II |
| Russia | Oxcarbazepine monotherapy and as add-on agent | Generalized and partial onset | Non randomized clinical trial | 52% of patients had 50% less seizures; 35% of patients had a reduced number of seizures by 75%; 18% of patients had full control. In patients who never received AED therapy, full treatment control was achieved in 74% and among patients who had received AED treatment full control was reached in 44%. Monotherapy or combined therapy also led to decreased seizure duration. | Burd et al |
| Russia | Topiramate anticonvulsant monotherapy | Generalized and partial onset | Prospective observational | 9.2% of patients had an increase in and duration of remission. Patients treated with other drug therapy had much lower rates of remission (4.6% for carbamazepine; 3.0% valproate; 1.5% phenobarbital). | Zheleznova et al |
| South Korea | Topiramate as add-on therapy | Partial onset refractory | Retrospective | The median seizure frequency reduction rate was 69% in the treatment population. | Cho et al |
| South Korea | Levetiracetam | Partial onset refractory | Prospective observational | The median percent reduction in weekly seizure frequency over the treatment period was 43.2%. The ≥50% and ≥75% responder rates were 45.4% and 36.1%, respectively. | Heo et al |
| South Korea | AED drug tapering | Generalized | Retrospective | 75% of patients achieved complete seizure freedom for ≥1 year. AED discontinuation was attempted in 91% of patients with a successful outcome. | Kim et al |
| South Korea | Pregabalin as add-on therapy | Partial onset refractory | RCT | There was a significant seizure reduction (52.7%) with pregabalin compared to placebo (37.7%). | Lee et al |
| Taiwan | Levetiracetam and topiramate as add-on agents | Partial onset | Prospective observational | Seizure frequency and epilepsy duration were not significantly different between the two groups compared to baseline. | Huang et al |
| Taiwan | Levetiracetam | Treatment-resistant partial onset patients | RCT | Levetiracetam reduced weekly partial-seizure frequency by 24% relative to placebo. Significantly more levetiracetam than placebo patients experienced a response of a ≥50% decrease from baseline in weekly frequency of partial seizures. | Tsai et al |
Abbreviations: RCT, randomized controlled trial; AE, adverse event; AED, anti-epileptic drug.