Literature DB >> 22707969

Rash in psychiatric and nonpsychiatric adolescent patients receiving lamotrigine in Korea: a retrospective cohort study.

Hee-Jong Tak1, Joon-Ho Ahn, Kun-Woo Kim, Yeni Kim, Sam-Wook Choi, Kyung-Yeon Lee, Eun Jin Park, Soo-Young Bhang.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Lamotrigine is a widely used medication for psychiatric disorders and epilepsy, but the adverse effects of this drug in adolescent Korean patients have not yet been investigated. In the present study, we sought to compare the incidence and impact of lamotrigine-induced skin rashes and different pattern of adverse events in psychiatric and nonpsychiatric adolescent patients.
METHODS: Using a retrospective cohort design, all of the charts were reviewed for adolescents (13 to 20 years old), treated with lamotrigine during the previous 2 years in the Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinic and Pediatric Neurologic Clinic of the Ulsan University Hospital in South Korea.
RESULTS: Of the 102 subjects, 23 patients developed a skin rash. All of these rashes were observed within 7 weeks of the initiation of the lamotrigine therapy. Only one subject developed a serious rash, which was diagnosed as Stevens-Johnson syndrome. Although the psychiatric subjects were administered statistically lower doses of lamotrigine during weeks 1 through 5 and at week 12, the likelihood of developing a rash was not significantly different between the psychiatric and nonpsychiatric patients.
CONCLUSION: Careful dose escalation and close observation of side effects for the first 7 weeks of treatment is important. The present study reveals the tolerability of lamotrigine in an adolescent population, although a double-blind, controlled trial is needed to confirm these findings.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adolescent; Lamotrigine; Rash; Safety; Tolerability

Year:  2012        PMID: 22707969      PMCID: PMC3372566          DOI: 10.4306/pi.2012.9.2.174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatry Investig        ISSN: 1738-3684            Impact factor:   2.505


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