William Rosenfeld1, Joan Conry2, Lieven Lagae3, Guntis Rozentals4, Haichen Yang5, Randi Fain6, Betsy Williams7, Dinesh Kumar8, Jin Zhu9, Antonio Laurenza10. 1. Comprehensive Epilepsy Care Center for Children and Adults, St Louis, MO, USA. Electronic address: werosenfeld@msn.com. 2. Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA. Electronic address: jconry@childrensnational.org. 3. University Hospitals KULeuven, Leuven, Belgium. Electronic address: lieven.lagae@uzleuven.be. 4. Children's Clinical University Hospital, Riga, Latvia. Electronic address: dr.rozentals@inbox.lv. 5. Eisai Neuroscience Product Creation Unit, Woodcliff Lake, NJ, USA. Electronic address: Haichen_Yang@eisai.com. 6. Eisai Medical and Scientific Affairs, Woodcliff Lake, NJ, USA. Electronic address: Randi_Fain@eisai.com. 7. Eisai Medical and Scientific Affairs, Woodcliff Lake, NJ, USA. Electronic address: Betsy_Williams@eisai.com. 8. Eisai Neuroscience Product Creation Unit, Woodcliff Lake, NJ, USA. Electronic address: Dinesh_Kumar@eisai.com. 9. Formerly Eisai Inc., Woodcliff Lake, NJ, USA. Electronic address: vgo329@yahoo.com. 10. Eisai Neuroscience Product Creation Unit, Woodcliff Lake, NJ, USA. Electronic address: Antonio_Laurenza@eisai.com.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Assess perampanel's efficacy and safety as adjunctive therapy in adolescents (ages 12-17) with drug-resistant partial seizures. METHODS:Adolescent patients enrolled in multinational, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase III core studies (studies 304, 305, or 306) completed 19-week, double-blind phase (6-week titration/13-week maintenance) with once-daily perampanel or placebo. Upon completion, patients were eligible for the extension (study 307), beginning with 16-week, blinded conversion, during which placebo patients switched to perampanel. Patients then entered the open-label treatment. RESULTS: Of 1480 patients from the core studies, 143 were adolescents. Pooled adolescent data from these core studies demonstrated median percent decreases in seizure frequency for perampanel 8 mg (34.8%) and 12 mg (35.6%) were approximately twice that of placebo (18.0%). Responder rates increased with perampanel 8 mg (40.9%) and 12 mg (45.0%) versus placebo (22.2%). Adolescents receiving concomitant enzyme-inducing antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) had smaller reductions in seizure frequency (8 mg:31.6%; 12 mg:26.8%) than those taking non-inducing AEDs (8 mg:54.6%; 12 mg:52.7%). Relative to pre-perampanel baseline, seizure frequency and responder rates during the extension (Weeks 1-52) improved with perampanel. Most commonly reported adverse events in adolescents during the core studies were dizziness (20.4%), somnolence (15.3%), aggression (8.2%), decreased appetite (6.1%), and rhinitis (5.1%). Dizziness (13.2%), somnolence (11.6%), and aggression (6.6%) most often led to perampanel interruption/dose adjustment during the extension. SIGNIFICANCE: Data demonstrated adjunctive perampanel treatment in adolescents with drug-resistant partial seizures produced better seizure control versus placebo, sustained seizure frequency improvements, and a generally favorable safety profile. Results were comparable to the overall study population. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifiers: Study 304: NCT00699972; 305: NCT00699582; 306: NCT00700310; Study 307: NCT00735397.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: Assess perampanel's efficacy and safety as adjunctive therapy in adolescents (ages 12-17) with drug-resistant partial seizures. METHODS: Adolescent patients enrolled in multinational, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase III core studies (studies 304, 305, or 306) completed 19-week, double-blind phase (6-week titration/13-week maintenance) with once-daily perampanel or placebo. Upon completion, patients were eligible for the extension (study 307), beginning with 16-week, blinded conversion, during which placebo patients switched to perampanel. Patients then entered the open-label treatment. RESULTS: Of 1480 patients from the core studies, 143 were adolescents. Pooled adolescent data from these core studies demonstrated median percent decreases in seizure frequency for perampanel 8 mg (34.8%) and 12 mg (35.6%) were approximately twice that of placebo (18.0%). Responder rates increased with perampanel 8 mg (40.9%) and 12 mg (45.0%) versus placebo (22.2%). Adolescents receiving concomitant enzyme-inducing antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) had smaller reductions in seizure frequency (8 mg:31.6%; 12 mg:26.8%) than those taking non-inducing AEDs (8 mg:54.6%; 12 mg:52.7%). Relative to pre-perampanel baseline, seizure frequency and responder rates during the extension (Weeks 1-52) improved with perampanel. Most commonly reported adverse events in adolescents during the core studies were dizziness (20.4%), somnolence (15.3%), aggression (8.2%), decreased appetite (6.1%), and rhinitis (5.1%). Dizziness (13.2%), somnolence (11.6%), and aggression (6.6%) most often led to perampanel interruption/dose adjustment during the extension. SIGNIFICANCE: Data demonstrated adjunctive perampanel treatment in adolescents with drug-resistant partial seizures produced better seizure control versus placebo, sustained seizure frequency improvements, and a generally favorable safety profile. Results were comparable to the overall study population. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifiers: Study 304: NCT00699972; 305: NCT00699582; 306: NCT00700310; Study 307: NCT00735397.
Authors: Martin J Brodie; Frank Besag; Alan B Ettinger; Marco Mula; Gabriella Gobbi; Stefano Comai; Albert P Aldenkamp; Bernhard J Steinhoff Journal: Pharmacol Rev Date: 2016-07 Impact factor: 25.468