| Literature DB >> 26310189 |
Eugen Trinka1, Julia Höfler, Markus Leitinger, Francesco Brigo.
Abstract
Status epilepticus (SE) represents the most severe form of epilepsy. It is one of the most common neurologic emergencies, with an incidence of up to 61 per 100,000 per year and an estimated mortality of 20 %. Clinically, tonic-clonic convulsive SE is divided into four subsequent stages: early, established, refractory, and super-refractory. Pharmacotherapy of status epilepticus, especially of its later stages, represents an "evidence-free zone," due to a lack of high-quality, controlled trials to inform clinical decisions. This comprehensive narrative review focuses on the pharmacotherapy of SE, presented according to the four-staged approach outlined above, and providing pharmacological properties and efficacy/safety data for each antiepileptic drug according to the strength of scientific evidence from the available literature. Data sources included MEDLINE and back-tracking of references in pertinent studies. Intravenous lorazepam or intramuscular midazolam effectively control early SE in approximately 63-73 % of patients. Despite a suboptimal safety profile, intravenous phenytoin or phenobarbital are widely used treatments for established SE; alternatives include valproate, levetiracetam, and lacosamide. Anesthetics are widely used in refractory and super-refractory SE, despite the current lack of trials in this field. Data on alternative treatments in the later stages are limited. Valproate and levetiracetam represent safe and effective alternatives to phenobarbital and phenytoin for treatment of established SE persisting despite first-line treatment with benzodiazepines. To date there are no class I data to support recommendations for most antiepileptic drugs for established, refractory, and super-refractory SE. Limiting the methodologic heterogeneity across studies is required and high-class randomized, controlled trials to inform clinicians about the best treatment in established and refractory status are needed.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26310189 PMCID: PMC4559580 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-015-0454-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Fig. 1Clinical course of convulsive status epilepticus (SE)
Main randomized, controlled clinical trials conducted in different stages of status epilepticus (SE)
| Study | Country | Definition of SE | Participants and age | Interventions | Clinical seizure cessation | Adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early SE: Stage I | ||||||
| Remy et al. [ | France | Seizures >20 min or 2 GTCS within 20 min | Adults | Rectal DZP 30 mg vs. rectal DZP 20 mg | DZP 30 mg 13/18 | DZP 30 mg 10/18 |
| Dreifuss et al. [ | USA | Acute repetitive seizures | Adults | Rectal DZP 0.2 mg/kg vs. placebo | DZP 31/46 | DZP 19/46 |
| Cereghino et al. [ | USA | Multiple seizures within 12–24 h | Adults | Rectal DZP 0.2 mg/kg vs. placebo | DZP 22/31 | DZP 10/31 |
| Shaner et al. [ | California | GTCS >30 min or 3 GTCS within 1 h or GTCS >5 min | Adults | IV DZP 2–20 mg + IV PHT 6–18 mg/kg based on initial drug levels vs. IV PB 10–30 mg/kg IV | DZP + PHT 10/18 | DZP + PHT 9/18 |
| Alldredge et al. [ | USA | Seizures >5 min | Adults | IV DZP 5 mg or LZP 2 mg vs. placebo | LZP 39/66 | LZP 7/66 |
| Chamberlain et al. [ | USA | Seizures >5 min | Children | IV DZP 0.2 mg/kg vs. IV LZP 0.1 mg/kg | DZP 101/140 | DZP 157** |
| Leppik et al. [ | USA | ≥3 GTCS in 1 h; confusional state with ongoing EEG abnormalities | Adults | IV LZP 2 mg vs. IV DZP 5 mg | LZP 33/37 | LZP 0/37 |
| Treiman et al. [ | USA | Seizures >10 min or 2 GTCS within 10 min or subtle generalized convulsive SE (coma and ictal discharges on EEG) | Adults | IV LZP vs. IV PB vs. IV DZP + PHT vs. IV PHT | LZP 63/97 | LZP 42/97 |
| Arya et al. [ | India | Seizures at arrival at emergency department | Children | IN LZP 0.1 mg/kg vs. IV LZP 0.1 mg/kg | IN LZP 59/71 | IN LZP 0/71 |
| Gathwala et al. [ | India | Seizures at arrival at emergency department | Children | IV MDZ 0.1 mg/kg vs. IV DZP 0.3 mg/kg vs. IV LZP 0.1 mg/kg | MDZ 36/40 | MDZ 4/40 |
| Lahat et al. [ | Israel | Febrile seizures >10 min | Children | IN MDZ 0.2 mg/kg vs. IV DZP 0.3 mg/kg | MDZ 23/26 | MDZ 0/26 |
| Fisgin et al. [ | Turkey | Seizures at arrival at emergency department | Children | IN MDZ 0.2 mg/kg vs. rectal DZP 0.3 mg/kg | MDZ 20/23 | MDZ 2/23 |
| Mahmoudian and Zadeh [ | Iran | Seizures at arrival at emergency department | Children | IN MDZ 5 mg/ml vs. IV DZP 0.2 mg/kg | MDZ 35/35 | MDZ 0/35 |
| Thakker and Shanbag [ | India | Seizures >10 min | Children | IN MDZ 0.2 mg/kg vs. IV DZP 0.3 mg/kg | MDZ 18/27 | MDZ 0/27 |
| Scott et al. [ | UK | Seizures at arrival of paramedics | Children/adults | Buccal MDZ 10 mg vs. rectal DZP 10 mg | MDZ 30/40* | MDZ: 0/40 |
| McIntyre et al. [ | UK | Seizures at arrival at emergency department | Children | Buccal MDZ 0.5 mg/kg vs. rectal DZP 0.5 mg/kg | MDZ 71/109* | MDZ 5/109 |
| Mpimbaza et al. [ | Uganda | Seizures at arrival at emergency department or >5 min | Children | Buccal MDZ 0.5 mg/kg vs. rectal DZP 0.5 mg/kg | MDZ 125/165 | MDZ 1/165 |
| Talukdar and Chakrabarty [ | India | Seizures at arrival at emergency department | Children | Buccal MDZ 0.2 mg/kg vs. IV DZP 0.3 mg/kg | MDZ 51/60 | MDZ 0/60 |
| Chamberlain et al. [ | USA | Seizures >10 min | Children | IM MDZ 0.2 mg/kg vs. IV DZP 0.3 mg/kg | MDZ 12/13 | MDZ 1/13 |
| Shah and Deshmukh [ | India | Seizures at arrival at emergency department | Children | IM MDZ 0.2 mg/kg vs. IV DZP 0.2 mg/kg | MDZ 45/50 | MDZ 0/50 |
| Silbergleit et al. [ | USA | Seizures >5 min | Children and adults | IM MDZ 5–10 mg (according to body weight) vs. IV LZP 2–4 mg (according to body weight) | MDZ 329/448 | MDZ 75/448 |
| Misra et al. [ | India | Seizures >10 min | Children/adults | IV VPA 30 mg/kg bolus vs. IV PHT 18 mg/kg | VPA 23/35 | VPA 4/35 |
| Gilad et al. [ | Israel | Seizures >30 min | Adults | IV VPA 30 mg/kg bolus vs. IV PHT 18 mg/kg bolus | VPA 13/18 | VPA 0/18 |
| Misra et al. [ | India | Seizures >5 min | Children/adults | IV LEV 20 mg/kg over 15 min vs. IV LZP 0.1 mg/kg over 2–4 min | LEV 29/38 | LEV 62** |
| Established SE: stage II | ||||||
| Shaner et al. [ | California | GTCS >30 min or 3 GTCS within 1 h or GTCS >5 min | Adults | IV DZP 2–20 mg + IV PHT 6–18 mg/kg based on initial drug levels vs. IV PB 10–30 mg/kg | DZP + PHT 10/18 | DZP + PHT 9/18 |
| Treiman et al. [ | USA | Seizures >10 min or 2 GTCS within 10 min or subtle generalized convulsive SE (coma and ictal discharges on EEG) | Adults | IV LZP vs. IV PB vs. IV DZP + PHT vs. IV PHT | LZP 63/97 | LZP 42/97 |
| Agarwal et al. [ | India | Seizures >5 min refractory to IV DZP | Children/adults | IV VPA 20 mg/kg bolus vs. IV PHT 20 mg/kg | VPA 44/50 | VPA 4/50 |
| Chen et al. [ | China | Seizures >5 min refractory to IV DZP | Adults | IV VPA 30 mg/kg bolus followed by infusion at 1–2 mg/kg vs. IV DZP 0.2 mg/kg bolus followed by infusion at 4 mg/h for 3 min and then increased every 3 min by 1 μg/min until seizure cessation or maximal duration (1 h) reached | VPA 15/30 | VPA 5/30 |
| Malamiri et al. [ | Iran | Seizures >5 min, not controlled by DZP | Children | IV VPA 20 mg/kg bolus vs. IV PB 20 mg/kg bolus | VPA 27/30 | 7/30 |
| Refractory SE: stage III | ||||||
| Singhi et al. [ | India | Motor seizures uncontrolled after 2 doses of DZP and PHT infusion | Children | IV MDZ 0.2 mg/kg bolus followed by 2–10 μg/kg/min infusion vs. DZP 0.01–0.1 mg/kg/min infusion | MDZ 18/21 | MDZ 8/21 |
| Mehta et al. [ | India | Seizures >30 min, not controlled by DZP and PHT | Children | IV VPA 30 mg/kg bolus vs. IV DZP 10 μg/Kg/min increased by 10 μg/kg/h every 5 min | VPA 16/20 | VPA 0** |
| Rossetti et al. [ | Switzerland, USA | Seizures >30 min, not controlled by benzodiazepine and PHT or VPA or PB or LEV | Adults | IV PRO 2 mg/kg bolus then titrated toward burst-suppression or 2 mg/kg/h vs. IV PTB 5 mg/kg bolus then titrated toward burst-suppression or 2 mg/kg/h or IV THP 2 mg/kg bolus then titrated toward burst-suppression or 4 mg/kg/h | PRO 6/14 | PRO15** |
| Super-refractory SE: stage IV | ||||||
| No randomized, controlled clinical trials available to inform clinical decisions | ||||||
| Studies not explicitly reporting a definition of SE | ||||||
| Appleton et al. [ | UK | SE not defined | Children | LZP 0.0.5–0.1 mg/kg IV vs. DZP 0.3–0.4 mg/kg IV | LZP 26/27 | LZP 0/27 |
| McCormick et al. [ | USA | SE not defined | Children | MDZ 0.2 mg/kg IV vs. LZP 0.1/kg IV | MDZ 14/15 | MDZ 1/15 |
DZP diazepam, GTCS generalized tonic-clonic seizures, IM intramuscular, IN intranasal, IV intravenous, LZP lorazepam, mo months, PB phenobarbital, PHT phenytoin, PRO propofol, PTB pentobarbital, SE status epilepticus, THP thiopental, VPA valproate
* Expressed as number of episodes
** Expressed as number of episodes; some patients experienced more than one adverse effects
Fig. 2Example of a treatment protocol for super-refractory status epilepticus (SE). Modified after Meierkord et al. [32]. AEDs antiepileptic drugs, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, ECT electroconvulsive therapy, EEG electroencephalogram, IV intravenous
| Initial treatment of early status epilepticus (SE) with intravenous lorazepam or intramuscular midazolam is able to control seizures in 63–73 %; buccal midazolam may be an alternative whenever intravenous or intramuscular application of other benzodiazepines is not possible. |
| In established SE, intravenous antiepileptic drugs (phenytoin/fosphenytoin, valproate, levetiracetam, phenobarbital) are most commonly used, but there is no class I evidence for choosing one over the other; valproate and levetiracetam represent safe and effective alternatives to phenobarbital and phenytoin; lacosamide is another potential alternative to phenytoin and phenobarbital, but current evidence is too sparse to give recommendations. |
| Refractory and super-refractory SE is treated with anesthetics (propofol, midazolam, thiopental/pentobarbital) with lower success rates and a high morbidity and mortality. Potential drugs to be considered in super-refractory SE are ketamine, magnesium, and immunomodulatory treatments, as well other cause-directed and non-medical treatments. |
| Other drugs which might be useful in the treatment of SE, such as clonazepam, paraldehyde, chlormethiazole (clomethiazole), or lidocaine, have a long history, but there is no higher-class evidence to support their use other than as second or third alternatives in refractory cases. |