| Literature DB >> 24806973 |
Eugen Trinka1, Julia Höfler, Alexander Zerbs, Francesco Brigo.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The effectiveness of valproate (VPA) in the treatment of focal and generalized epilepsies is well established. The drug has a wide spectrum of action, good tolerability, and has been available as an injectable formulation since 1993. Despite the lack of class A evidence, it has been used extensively in various forms of status epilepticus (SE). AIM: Our aim was to present a systematic review of data from randomized and non-randomized controlled trials to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intravenous VPA for the treatment of SE.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24806973 PMCID: PMC4078236 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-014-0167-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Randomized comparative studies evaluating intravenous valproate monotherapy in the treatment of status epilepticus. Studies are listed in decreasing order of sample size. All studies were carried out as single-center open-label trials, except Malamiri et al., which was conducted in two centers
| References |
| Patients | Type of SE | Dose regimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agarwal et al. [ | V: 50, P: 50 | 62 adults/38 children (<18 y), 67 male/33 female | Primary generalized seizures: 14, JME: 2 | V: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg at 40 mg/min, P: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg at up to 50 mg/min |
| Misra et al. [ | V: 35, P: 33 | Adults and children (1–85 y), 41 male/27 female | Convulsive SE (unspecified) | V: Initial bolus 30 mg/kg in 100 ml over 15 min, P: Initial bolus 18 mg/kg in 100 ml infused at 50 mg/min |
| Gilad et al. [ | V: 18, P: 9 | Adults (>18 y), 19 male/7 female | GTC SE | V : Initial bolus 30 mg/kg in 50 ml of saline over 20 min, P: Initial bolus of 18 mg/kg in 100 ml of saline over 20 min |
| Chen et al. [ | V: 30, D: 36 | Children and adults (>15 y), 36 male/30 female | GTC and sGTC SE | V: Initial bolus 30 mg/kg at 6 mg/kg/min followed by continuous infusion at 1–2 mg/kg/h, D: Initial (third) bolus of 0.2 mg/kg at 5 mg/min followed by infusion at 4 mg/h for 3 min and then increased every 3 min by 1 µg/min until seizure control or maximal duration (1 h) reached |
| Mehta et al. [ | V: 20, D: 20 | Children (≤12 y) (mean 3.7), 31 boys/9 girls | GTC SE: 18, sGTC SE : 12, Simple focal SE: 8, Multifocal : 2 | V: Initial bolus 30 mg/kg over 2–5 min; if SE uncontrolled, repeat bolus then infusion at 5 mg/kg/h, D: 10 µg/kg/min initial infusion increased by 10 µg/kg/h every 5 min if SE uncontrolled up to 100 µg/mg/kg |
| Malamiri et al. [ | V: 30, B: 30 | Children (>2 y) (median 5, range 3–16), 37 boys/23 girls | Convulsive SE (all subtypes) | V: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg in 20 ml saline at max. 5–6 mg/kg/min over 5–10 min, B: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg at max. 60–100 mg/min |
B phenobarbital, D diazepam, GTC generalized tonic–clonic, JME juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, P phenytoin, SE status epilepticus, sGTC secondary generalized tonic–clonic, V valproate
Fig. 1Intravenous valproic acid versus intravenous phenytoin, and intravenous valproic acid versus intravenous diazepam. Outcome: seizure cessation after drug administration. Analyses performed using Review Manager 5.2 (available at: http://tech.cochrane.org/revman/download). CI confidence interval, DZP diazepam, IV intravenous, PHT phenytoin, VPA valproic acid
Non-randomized comparative studies evaluating intravenous valproate monotherapy in the treatment of SE
| References |
| Patients | Type of SE | Dose regimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tripathi et al. [ | V: 41, L: 41 | Adults (>14 y), 42 male/40 female | Refractory GTC SE | V: Initial bolus 30 mg/kg at 5 mg/kg/min, L: initial bolus 30 mg/kg at 5 mg/kg/min |
| Tiamkao and Sawanyawisuth [ | V: 32, P: 37a | Adults (>15 y), No information on gender | GTC SE | V: Initial bolus 15–25 mg/kg with max infusion rate of 50 mg/min, P: Initial bolus 15–20 mg/kg with max infusion rate of 50 mg/min |
| Kalita et al. [ | V: 65, P: 52 | 22 children (≤12 y), 95 adults, 73 male/44 female | GTC SE: 108, NCSE: 9 | V: Initial bolus 30 mg/kg, P: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg |
| Alvarez et al. [ | V: 59, P: 70, L: 58 | Adults (>16 y), No information on gender | SE (all subtypes including NCSE) | V: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg with maintenance dosage 1,000–2,500 mg/day, P: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg with maintenance dosage 300–400 mg/day, L: Initial bolus 20 mg/kg with maintenance dosage 1,000–3,000/day |
Studies are listed in decreasing order of sample size
a12 and 20 patients received intravenous valproate as the first- and second-line therapy, respectively
GTC generalized tonic–clonic, L levetiracetam, NCSE non-convulsive status epilepticus, P phenytoin, SE status epilepticus, V valproate
Prospective open-label studies evaluating intravenous valproate monotherapy in the treatment of status epilepticus
| References |
| Patients | Type of SE | Dose regimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Olsen et al. [ | 41 | Adults (20–85 y) 18 men/23 women | GTC SE: 19 Complex partial SE: 16 Unclassifiable: 6 | Initial bolus 25 mg/kg over 30 min Followed by infusion 100 mg/h for ≥24 h Median bolus dose 1,800 mg (range 700–2,500 mg) |
| Überall et al. [ | 41 | Children (≤16 y) 27 boys/14 girls | GTC SE: 10 sGTC SE: 9 Absence status: 5 Infantile spasms: 4 Neonatal SE: 5 EPC: 2 Complex partial SE: 6 | Initial bolus 20–40 mg/kg over 1–5 min Repeated after 10–15 min if necessary Then 5 mg/kg/h infusion |
| Giroud et al. [ | 23 | Adults (17–80 y) 13 men/10 women | GTC SE: 8 GMC SE: 2 PM SE: 10 PMC SE: 1 Absence status: 2 | Initial bolus 15 mg/kg Followed 30 min later by infusion at 1 mg/kg/h Mean total dose: 19.4 mg/kg |
| Czapiński and Terczyński [ | 20 | Adults (16–76) 11 men/9 women | Simple partial SE: 11 GTC SE: 9 | Initial bolus 15 mg/kg Followed 30 min later by infusion at 1 mg/kg/h for 24 h |
| Ramsay et al. [ | 10 | Age and gender not specified | Not specified | Bolus infusion 20–30 mg/kg at 0.3–0.5 mg/kg/min Total dose up to 3,000 mg within 12 min |
| Leninger and Hofnagel [ | 6 | Adults (23–70) All women | NCSE | 900–3,000 mg/24 h infusion over 2 days |
| Narayanan and Murthy [ | 22 (2)a | 3 children/19 adults 11 male/11 female (2 adult women) | NCSE (2 absence status) | Not specified |
| Chen et al. [ | 48 | 5 children (<15 y) and 43 adults (>15 y) 19 male/29 female | GTC SE: 30 sGTC SE: 14 TSE: 4 | Initial bolus of 15 mg/kg over 5 min (repeated 10–15 min later if necessary), followed by continuous infusion at 30 mg/kg, infused at an hourly rate of 6 mg/kg |
aThe figures in brackets refer to subjects receiving intravenous valproate monotherapy in studies where more than one AED was studied
EPC epilepsia partialis continua, GMC generalized myoclonic, GTC generalized tonic–clonic, NCSE non-convulsive status epilepticus, PM partial motor, PMC partial myoclonic, SE status epilepticus, sGTC secondary generalized tonic–clonic, TSE tonic status epilepticus
Retrospective case series evaluating intravenous valproate monotherapy in the treatment of status epilepticus
| References |
| Patients | Type of SE | Dose regimen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Limdi et al. [ | 63 | Age range not specified 30 men/33 women | Not specified | Bolus 10–78 mg/kg until serum levels reach 278 mg/l |
| Czapiński [ | 120 (40)a | Age and gender not specified | Not specified | Initial bolus 15 mg/kg Followed by infusion at 1 mg/kg/h |
| Peters and Pohlmann-Eden [ | 35 | Adults (18–85 y) 18 men/17 women | GTC SE: 6 Simple partial: 12 Complex partial: 14 Absence status: 3 | Bolus infusion 4–16 mg/kg for 5–10 min Followed by infusion of 0.5–4 mg/kg/h for 4 h to 6 days |
| Naritoku [ | 32 | Mean age 68.5 y Gender unspecified | GTC SE: 12 Other: 20 | Bolus infusion 25 mg/kg Mean serum concentration 80.1 mg/l |
| Rosenow and Knake [ | 27 | Adults (22–94 y) Gender unspecified | sGTC SE: 11 Partial SE: 7 Absence status: 2 | Bolus infusion 300–800 mg (mean 1,000 mg) Followed by infusion of 1,200–1,800 mg/24 h |
| Campistol et al. [ | 19 | Children (≤7 y) 10 boys/9 girls | IG SE: 4 SP SE: 2 Other secondary: 17 | Initial bolus 20 mg/kg Followed by infusion at 1 mg/kg/h |
| Yu et al. [ | 40 (18)a | Children (≤19 y) Gender unspecified | Not specified | Bolus infusion 25 mg/kg at 2.8 mg/kg/min |
| Katragadda et al. [ | 12 | 1 child, 11 adults | Partial NCSE: 9 Absence status: 3 | Not specified |
| Price [ | 11 | 6 children (6–17 y) 5 adults (26–72 y) 7 male/4 female | Not specified | Not standardized |
| Jha et al. [ | 11 | 2 children (7, 15 y) 9 adults (24–60 y) 7 male/4 female | GTC SE: 1 EPC: 5 Myoclonic SE: 4 NCSE: 1 | Bolus infusion 20 mg/kg at 20 mg/min Repeated as necessary |
| Patel and Jha [ | 10 | Adults (18–60 y) 3 men/7 women | Post-anoxic myoclonic SE | Bolus infusion 20 mg/kg at 20 mg/min Followed by 10 mg/kg every 6 h for 24 h |
| Short [ | 22 (7)a | All ages (2–75 y) Mean age 40 y | Not specified | Mean initial dose: 1,020 ± 946 mg Mean total dose: 19,017 ± 30,196 mg Mean infusion rate: 21 ± 13 mg/min |
aThe figures in brackets indicate the number of subjects receiving intravenous valproate monotherapy
EPC epilepsia partialis continua, GTC generalized tonic–clonic, IG idiopathic generalized, NCSE non-convulsive status epilepticus, SE status epilepticus, sGCT secondary generalized tonic–clonic, SP simple partial
Seizure outcome in patients receiving intravenous valproate monotherapy for the treatment of status epilepticus
| Study | Age group | SE type | Definition of ‘responders’ | Responders/ | % (95 % CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Comparative randomized studies | |||||
| Agarwal et al. [ | Mixed | CSE | Clinical or EEG seizure cessation within 20 min of infusion | 44/50 | 88.0 (79–97) |
| Misra et al. [ | Mixed | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 23/35 | 65.7 (50–81.4) |
| Gilad et al. [ | Adults | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation within 20 min of infusion | 13/18 | 72.2 (51.5–92.9) |
| Chen et al. [ | Mixed | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 15/30 | 50.0 (32.1–67.9) |
| Mehta et al. [ | Children | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 16/20 | 80.0 (62.5–97.5) |
| Malamiri et al. [ | Children | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion within 20 min of infusion | 27/30 | 90.0 (79.3–100) |
| Comparative non-randomized studies | |||||
| Tripathi et al. [ | Adults | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 26/41 | 68.3 (48.7–78.2) |
| Tiamkao and Sawanyawisuth [ | Adults | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation within 30 min of infusion | 9/12b | 75 (50.5–99.5) |
| 7/20b | 35 (14.1–55.9) | ||||
| Kalita et al. [ | Mixed | Mixed | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 37/65 | 56.9 (44.9–69) |
| Alvarez et al. [ | Adults | Mixed | No additional AEDs needed for ≥48 h after clinical and EEG seizure cessation | 44/59 | 74.6 (63.5–85.7) |
| Prospective studies | |||||
| Olsen et al. [ | Adults | Mixed | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 31/41 | 75.6 (62.5–88.8) |
| Überall et al. [ | Children | Mixed | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 32/41 | 78.0 (65.4–90.7) |
| Giroud et al. [ | Adults | Mixed | Clinical seizure cessation within 20 min of infusion | 19/23 | 82.6 (67.1–98.1) |
| Czapiński and Terczyński [ | Adults | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation within 30 min of infusion | 16/20 | 80.0 (62.5–97.5) |
| Ramsay et al. [ | NR | NR | NR | 6/10 | 60.0 (26.6–90.4) |
| Leninger and Hofnagel [ | Adults | NCSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 4/6 | 66.7 (28.9–104.4) |
| Narayanan and Murthy [ | Adults | NCSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 2/2 | 100 |
| Chen et al. [ | Mixed | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation within 1 h of the infusion | 42/48 | 87.5 (78.1–96.9) |
| Retrospective case series | |||||
| Limdi et al. [ | NR | NR | No additional AEDs needed for ≥12 h after clinical and/or EEG seizure cessation | 40/63 | 63.3 (51.6–75.4) |
| Czapiński [ | NR | NR | Clinical seizure cessation within 30 min of infusion | 33/40 | 82.5 (70.7–94.3) |
| Peters and Pohlmann-Eden [ | Adults | Mixed | Clinical seizure cessation within 15 min of infusion | 27/35 | 77.1 (63.2–91.1) |
| Naritoku [ | NR | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 16/32 | 50.0 (32.7–67.3) |
| Rosenow and Knake [ | Adults | Mixed | NR | 12/27 | 44.4 (25.7–63.2) |
| Campistol et al. [ | Children | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 11/19 | 57.9 (35.7–80.1) |
| Yu et al. [ | Children | Mixed | Clinical seizure cessation within 20 min of infusion | 18/18 | 100 |
| Katragadda et al. [ | Mixed | NCSE | NR | 9/12 | 75.0 (50.5–99.5) |
| Price [ | Mixed | NR | NR | 10/15 | 66.7 (42.8–90.5) |
| Jha et al. [ | Mixed | Mixed | Clinical seizure cessation within 24–48 h of infusion | 10/11 | 90.9 (73.9–107.3) |
| Patel and Jha [ | Adults | CSE | Clinical seizure cessation after infusion | 6/10 | 60.0 (29.6–90.4) |
| Short [ | Mixed | NR | NR | 5/7 | 71.4 (38–104.9) |
aNumber of subjects receiving intravenous valproate monotherapy
b12 and 20 patients received intravenous valproate as the first- and second-line therapy, respectively
AED anti-epileptic drug, CI confidence interval, CSE convulsive status epilepticus, EEG electroencephalography, NCSE non-convulsive status epilepticus, NR not reported, SE status epilepticus
Adverse event reporting in six comparative randomized studies of valproate in status epilepticus
| Study and adverse event | Valproate | Phenytoin | Diazepam | Phenobarbital |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agarwal et al. [ | ||||
| Hypotension | 0/50 | 6/50 | ||
| Respiratory depression | 0/50 | 2/50 | ||
| Mild elevation of liver enzymes | 4/50 | 0/50 | ||
| Misra et al. [ | ||||
| Hypotension | 0/35 | 2/33 | ||
| Respiratory depression | 1/35 | 2/33 | ||
| Liver dysfunction | 3/35 | 2/33 | ||
| Gilad et al. [ | ||||
| Cardiac arrhythmia | 0/18 | 1/9 | ||
| Vertigo | 0/18 | 1/9 | ||
| Hyponatremia | 0/18 | 1/9 | ||
| Chen et al. [ | ||||
| Hypotension | 0/30 | 2/36 | ||
| Respiratory depression | 0/30 | 2/36 | ||
| Liver dysfunction | 0/30 | 0/36 | ||
| Bone marrow suppression | 1/30 | 0/36 | ||
| Hyperammonemia | 4/30 | 0/36 | ||
| Mehta et al. [ | ||||
| Hypotension | 0/20 | 10/20 | ||
| Respiratory depression | 0/20 | 12/20 | ||
| Malamiri et al. [ | ||||
| Hypotension | 1/30 | 0/30 | ||
| Respiratory depression | 0/30 | 1/30 | ||
| Lethargy | 3/30 | 17/30 | ||
| Vomiting | 3/30 | 4/30 | ||
Adverse event reporting in four comparative non-randomized studies of valproate in status epilepticus
| Study | Adverse event | Patient numbers in the VPA arm | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tripathi et al. [ | Hypotension | 0/41 | |
| Respiratory depression | 0/41 | ||
| Liver dysfunction | 0/41 | ||
| Thrombocytopenia | 0/41 | ||
| Tiamkao and Sawanyawisuth [ | Adverse effects not reported | ||
| Kalita et al. [ | Adverse effects not reported | ||
| Alvarez et al. [ | Adverse effects not reported | ||
Adverse event reporting in other clinical studies on valproate in status epilepticus
| Study | N | Main safety findings |
|---|---|---|
| Campistol et al. [ | 19 | No evidence of important side effects; hyperammonemia, somnolence (two subjects each); thrombocytopenia/lymphopenia (one subject); no hypotension |
| Czapiński and Terczyński [ | 20 | No adverse events in ten subjects; nausea, injection site pain, abdominal pain (two subjects each); dizziness, taste perversion, somnolence, tremor (one subject each) |
| Czapiński [ | 40 | No safety data reported |
| Giroud et al. [ | 23 | Moderate, transient decrease in heart rate and blood pressure; no respiratory changes; no local injection reactions |
| Jha et al. [ | 11 | No adverse events reported; no respiratory depression or hypotension |
| Katragadda et al. [ | 12 | Thrombocytopenia in three subjects |
| Leninger and Hofnagel [ | 6 | No safety data reported |
| Limdi et al. [ | 63 | Hypotension in three subjects; no injection-site reactions |
| Narayanan and Murthy [ | 2 | Adverse events not reported by treatment group |
| Naritoku [ | 10 | One case of hyperammonemia; no hypotension |
| Olsen et al. [ | 41 | One case of moderate hypotension; no other side effects observed |
| Patel and Jha [ | 10 | No adverse events reported |
| Peters and Pohlmann-Eden [ | 35 | No severe side effects; mild side effects in seven subjects (dizziness, skin reaction, nausea, fatigue, tremor); no hypotension |
| Price et al. [ | 11 | One case of thrombocytopenia |
| Ramsay et al. [ | 10 | No cardiovascular, hematological, or subjective side effects |
| Rosenow and Knake [ | 27 | No adverse events reported |
| Short [ | 7 | Hyperammonemia in one subject; sedation and hypotension in two subjects |
| Überall et al. [ | 41 | No drug-related systemic or local side effects. No biological changes |
| Yu et al. [ | 18 | No significant changes in heart rate or blood pressure; one case of transient tremor |
| Chen et al. [ | 48 | No evidence for valproate-related systemic or local side effects |
| Tiamkao and Sawanyawisuth [ | 32 | Adverse effects not systematically reported |
| The overall response rate to abrogate status epilepticus (SE) with intravenous (IV) valproate was 70.9 % (601 out of 848 patients; 95 % confidence interval [CI] 67.8–73.9), with a most commonly used dose between 15 and 45 mg/kg in bolus (6 mg/kg/min) followed by 1–3 mg/kg/h infusion. |
| The incidence of adverse events was low overall (<10 %), mainly dizziness, thrombocytopenia, and mild hypotension, which was independent of infusion rates, and a good cardiovascular and respiratory tolerability even in high doses and fast infusion rates up to 30 mg/kg at 10 mg/kg/min. |
| Given the low incidence of clinically relevant adverse events, and the potentially serious or even fatal consequences of not abrogating seizure activity rapidly in SE, the ratio of benefit to risk seems clearly in favor of treatment. |
| Though IV valproate appears to be an effective and safe treatment with good tolerability in SE, there is an urgent need for high-quality randomized controlled trials to inform clinicians on the best treatment in SE. |