| Literature DB >> 29499762 |
Marios Charalambous1, Akos Pakozdy2, Sofie F M Bhatti3, Holger A Volk4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding the efficacy and safety profile of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) in feline epilepsy is a crucial consideration for managing this important brain disease. However, there is a lack of information about the treatment of feline epilepsy and therefore a systematic review was constructed to assess current evidence for the AEDs' efficacy and tolerability in cats. The methods and materials of our former systematic reviews in canine epilepsy were mostly mirrored for the current systematic review in cats. Databases of PubMed, CAB Direct and Google scholar were searched to detect peer-reviewed studies reporting efficacy and/or adverse effects of AEDs in cats. The studies were assessed with regards to their quality of evidence, i.e. study design, study population, diagnostic criteria and overall risk of bias and the outcome measures reported, i.e. prevalence and 95% confidence interval of the successful and affected population in each study and in total.Entities:
Keywords: adverse effects; antiepileptic drugs; comprehensive review; efficacy; epilepsy; feline
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29499762 PMCID: PMC5834883 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-018-1386-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Details of study design, risk of bias, disease characterization and study group size
| Study design | Risk of bias | Disease definitions (characterization) | Study groups size | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blinding of outcome assessment | Randomization | allocation concealment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective reporting | other sources of bias | ||||
| Engel et al. [ | bRELAS | low | low | high | low | high | high; company funding | well | very small |
| Engel et al. [ | low | low | high | low | high | high; company funding | well | very small | |
| Lowrie et al. [ | nbRCT | high | low | high | high | low | unclear | poorly | good |
| Sawchuk et al. [ | nbRELAS | high | low | low | low | high | unclear | clear | small |
| Carnes et al. [ | high | low | high | low | high | unclear | clear | small | |
| Engel et al. [ | UCT | high | high | high | low | high | high; company funding | well | very small |
| Dewey et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | high; conference abstract | unclear | very small | |
| Ukai et al. [ | high | high | high | high | high | unclear | well | very small | |
| Volk et al. [ | high | high | high | low | low | high; conference abstract | well | very small | |
| Bailey et al. [ | high | high | high | high | high | unclear | fairly | small | |
| Roye et al. [ | UELAS | high | high | high | low | high | unclear | unclear | very small |
| Barnard et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | unclear; conference abstract | clear | very small | |
| Solomon et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | unclear | unclear | very small | |
| Hasegawa et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | unclear | unclear | very small | |
| Pellegrini et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | unclear | unclear | very small | |
| Cochrane, Black et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | unclear | clear | very small | |
| Cochrane, Parent et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | unclear | clear | very small | |
| Boothe et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | low | clear | very small | |
| Cautela et al. [ | high | high | high | low | high | high; conference abstract | clear | very small | |
| Gasper et al. [ | high | high | high | high | high | unclear | clear | small | |
| Dreimann [ | high | high | high | low | high | High; abstract; dissertation | unclear | small | |
| Schwartz-Porsche and Kaiser [ | retrospective case series | NA | unclear | moderate | |||||
| Brewer et al. [ | unclear | very small | |||||||
| Center et al. [ | unclear | small | |||||||
| Hughes et al. [ | clear | very small | |||||||
| Wagner [ | unclear | moderate | |||||||
| Boothe et al. [ | unclear | small | |||||||
| Volk et al. [ | well | small | |||||||
| Schriefl et al. [ | fairly | small | |||||||
| Bertolani et al. [ | unclear | very small | |||||||
| Pakozdy et al. [ | fairly | moderate | |||||||
| Finnerty et al. [ | well | small | |||||||
| Wahle et al. [ | well | small | |||||||
| Ducote et al. [ | Case reports | NA | NA | very small | |||||
| Zoran et al. [ | clear | very small | |||||||
| Lieser and Schwedes 2016 | NA | very small | |||||||
| Boydell [ | well | very small | |||||||
| Baho et al. [ | NA | very small | |||||||
| Klang et al. [ | well | very small | |||||||
| Cuff et al. [ | well | very small | |||||||
Sample size; >50 subjects per group (‘good’ number), 20–50 subjects (‘moderate’ number), 10–19 subjects (‘small’ number) and (d) <10 subjects (‘very small’ number)
Details of feline population size, seizure frequency, treatment time, doses of AED(s), seizure frequency reduction after AED initiation, 95% CI for the successful and affected cases and evidence statements for each study
| References | Wagner [ | Volk et al. [ | Boothe et al. [ | Boothe et al. [ | Bertolani et al. [ | Volk et al. [ | Klang et sl. [ | Carnes et al. [ | Bailey et al. [ | Lowrie et al. [ | Dewey et al. [ | Cuff et al. [ | Barnard et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED evaluated | Potassium Bromide | LEV | |||||||||||
| 2nd AED | - | - | - | PB (12) | - | - | PB | - | PB (12) | PB (4) | PB | - | |
| 3rd AED | - | - | - | - | - | - | LEV | - | - | - | - | ||
| 4th AED | - | - | - | - | - | - | Gabapentin | - | - | - | - | - | |
| No of cats | 26 | 9 | 7 | 17 | 7 | 5 | 1 | 10 (non-epileptic cats) | 12 (10 completed the efficacy analysis) | 34 (28 completed the efficacy analysis) | 4 (3 had presumed IE) | 1 | 7 (non-epileptic cats) |
| Age of cats at seizure onset (years) | NA | mean 4.1 | NA | mean 8.6 | median 3; mean 3.2; range 1-8 | NA | 4 | NA | median 2; range 0.25-16 | median 16; range 10-19 | NA | 10 | NA |
| Period of treatment or follow-up (months) | range 1.75-14 | mean 13.63 | 2 | mean 12.5 | median 8; mean 18; range 1-96 | NA | 0.75 | 1 day | median 9; mean 12; range 6-24 | 3 | Minimum 3 months | 2 | 0.06 |
| Dose of AED(s) (mg/kg) | NA | mean 16.5 PO BID | 15 PO BID | 12 PO BID | NA | NA | PBr 100 (total dose) PO BID; PB: 30 (total dose) PO BID; LEV: 50 (total dose) PO TID; gabapentin 100 (total dose) PO TID | 20 mg/kg PO or IV SID (only one single dose) | PB: median 3.02; range 0.75-4.9 PO BID; LEV: median 23.6; range 17.2-34.7 PO TID | median 62.5; range 60-93.75 PO SID | 20 mg/kg PO TID | PB: 4.5 PO BID; LEV 50 PO TID | 500 mg PO single dose (extended release) |
| Serum levels of AED(s) | NA | mean 1.15 mg/ml | mean 1.1 mg/ml | PBr: mean 1.5 mg/ml. PB: range, 13-47 μg/ml | NA | NA | NA | median 26.77; mean 25.54; range 13.22-37.11 μg/ml | PB: median 29; range 5.6-75 μg/ml; LEV: median 25.5 μg/ml | NA | PB: mean 35.8 μg/ml; LEV: mean, 16.5; range: 6.9–24.3 μg/ml | NA | 89.7 + /−25.7 μg/ ml |
| Pre-treatment SF (seizures/month or year) | NA | mean 4/month (recorder over a period of 6-12 months) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | median 2.1; range 0.8-42.4/month (recorder over a period of median 4.5; range 0.3-46 months) | 65/month | NA | continuous | NA |
| Post-treatment SF (seizures/month or year) | NA | 0.52/month | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | median 0.42; range 0-1.25/month | NA | NA | 0 (recorded over a period of 2 months) | NA |
| No of cats that were failures | NA | 1/9 (11%) | NA | - | NA | 0 | NA | NA | 0% | 0/28 (0%) | 1/4 (25%) | - | NA |
| No of cats with >0% - <50% reduction in SF | NA | - | NA | 8/15 (53%) | NA | 0 | NA | NA | 3/10 (30%) | 0/28 (0%) | 3/4 (75%) | - | NA |
| No of cats with ≥50% - <100% reduction in SF | NA | 3/9 (33%) | NA | - | NA | 0 | NA | NA | 4/10 (40%) | 14/28 (50%) | 0 | - | NA |
| No of cats with 100% reduction in SF | NA | 5/9 (56%) | NA | 7/15 (47%) (available for 15 cats only and 3/7 were receiving also PB) | NA | 5/5 (100%) | NA | NA | 3/10 (30%) | 14/28 (50%) | 0 | 1/1 (100%) | NA |
| 95% CI of successfully treated cases | NA | 56-98% | NA | 25-70% | NA | 100% | NA | NA | 40%-90% | 100% | 0% | 100% | NA |
| Prevalence of adverse effects | 11/26 (42%) | 6/9 (67%) | 0% | 8/17 (47%) | NA | 4/5 (80%) | NA | 10/10 (100%) | 2/12 (17%) | 5/34 (18%) | 2/4 (50%) | NA | 0% |
| 95% CI of cases that developed adverse effects | 26-61% | 35-88% | 0% | 26%-70% | NA | 38-96% | NA | 100% | 4-45% | 6-30% | 15-85% | NA | 0% |
| Body system affected and adverse effects | Respiratory (cough(11), dyspnea(2)) | Respiratory (cough(6)), dermatological (dermatitis/bromoderma(1)) | NA | Respiratory (cough (6)), GI (vomiting (1)), Neurological (sedation/ataxia (2)), weight gain (1), PD (1) | Respiratory (cough(7), dyspnea(2), tachypnea (2)) | Respiratory (cough, dyspnea) | Respiratory (cough, tachypnea) | GI (hypersalivation) | Neurological (sedation(1)), GI (anorexia(2)) | Neurological (sedation (4), ataxia (2), GI (anorexia (3)), PD (1) | ClinPath (increased ALP(2)) | NA | NA |
| Most common adverse effects | Cough | Cough | NA | Cough | Cough | Cough | NA | hypersalivation (after PO administration only) | anorexia | sedation, anorexia | increased ALP | NA | NA |
| Adverse effect type | II | II | NA | I & II | II | II | II | I | I | I | I | NA | NA |
| Proportion of specific adverse effects for each AED based on all study reports | Type I: sedation, ataxia, vomiting, weight gain and PD (1/7; 14%) | Type I: sedation (2/5; 40%), anorexia (2/5; 40%), ataxia (1/5; 20%), hypersalivation (1/5; 20%), elevated serum ALP (1/5; 20%) and PD (1/5; 20%) | |||||||||||
| Type II: cough (6/7; 86%), dyspnea (3/7; 43%), tachypnea (2/7; 29%), dermatitis/bromoderma (1/7; 14%) | |||||||||||||
| One study reported that there were no adverse effects. | |||||||||||||
| Proportion of specific adverse effects for each AED based on the total affected population | Cough (35/72; 49%), dyspnea (9/72; 12%), tachypnea (3/72; 4%), sedation (2/72; 3%), ataxia (2/72; 3%), dermatitis/bromoderma (1/72; 1%), vomiting (1/72; 1%), weight gain (1/72; 1%) and PD (1/72; 1%) | Hypersalivation (10/67; 15%), sedation (5/67; 7%), anorexia (5/67; 7%), ataxia (2/67; 3%), elevated serum ALP (2/67; 3%) and PD (1/67; 1%) | |||||||||||
| Overall level of evidence supporting the efficacy and safety profile of an AED | Weak level of evidence for potassium bromide’s efficacy and safety profile | Weak level of evidence for levetiracetam’s efficacy and safety profile | |||||||||||
AED(s) anti-epileptic drug(s), BID bis in die (twice daily), CI confidence interval, GI gastrointestinal, IE idiopathic epilepsy, LEV Levetiracetam, m month(s), NA Not Available, PB phenobarbital, PD polydipsia, PU polyuria, PP polyphagia, PBr potassium bromide, PO per os, SID semel in die (once daily), TID ter in die (three times daily), w week(s), y year(s)
Details of feline population size, seizure frequency, treatment time, doses of AED(s), seizure frequency reduction after AED initiation, 95% CI for the successful and affected cases and evidence statements for each study
| References | Engel et al. [ | Engel et al. [ | Engel et al. [ | Center et al. [ | Hughes et al. [ | Schwarz-Porsche & Kaiser, [ | Sawchuk et al. [ | Schwarz-Porsche & Kaiser, [ | Roye et al., [ | Schwarz-Porsche & Kaiser [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED evaluated | Imepitoin | Diazepam | Primidone | Phenytoin | ||||||
| 2nd AED | - | - | - | - | - | Diazepam | ||||
| 3rd AED | - | - | - | - | - | - | ||||
| 4th AED | - | - | - | - | - | - | ||||
| No of cats | 6 | 6 | 8 (7 were evaluated for the safety profile) | 11 (non-epileptic cats) | 5 (non-epileptic cats) | NA | 11 | 6 | 4 (non-epileptic cats) | 2 |
| Age of cats at seizure onset (years) | NA | NA | median 4; mean 6.3; range 1-15 | NA | range 1-12 | range 0.2-9 | NA | range 0.2-9 | NA | range 0.2-9 |
| Period of treatment or follow-up (months) | 1 | 1 | at least 2 (for the seizure-freedom cases the period was mean 4; range 2-7.5) | 0.5 | 0.25-0.5 | 6 | 3 | range 5-108 | 0.8 | >3-9 |
| Dose of AED(s) (mg/kg) | 30 PO BID | 40 & 80 PO BID | median 30; mean 27.92 PO BID | 1.25-2 PO SID or BID | 0.23-0.82 PO SID | 0.5-2 PO (divided in 3 daily doses) | 20 mg/kg PO BID | 40-50 PO (divided in three daily doses) | 10 PO and intramuscularly SID | 1.5 PO SID |
| Serum levels of AED(s) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 4.1 μg/mL | NA | 25-35 μg/mL | 6.5-17 μg/mL |
| Pre-treatment SF (seizures/month or year) | NA | NA | Median 20; mean 57.71; range 2-200 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| Post-treatment SF (seizures/month or year) | NA | NA | Median 1.5; mean 19.43; range 0-100 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| No of cats that were failures | NA | NA | 3/8 (37%) | NA | NA | - | NA | 2/6 (33%) | NA | 1/2 (50%) |
| No of cats with >0% - <50% reduction in SF | NA | NA | - | NA | NA | 20% | NA | - | NA | - |
| No of cats with ≥50% - <100% reduction in SF | NA | NA | 1/8 (13%) | NA | NA | 40% | NA | 2/6 (33%) | NA | - |
| No of cats with 100% reduction in SF | NA | NA | 4/8 (50%) | NA | NA | 40% | NA | 2/6 (33%) | NA | 1/2 (50%) |
| 95% CI of successfully treated cases | NA | NA | 30-86% | NA | NA | NA | NA | 30-90% | NA | 9-90% |
| Prevalence of adverse effects | 0 % (apart from intermittent/rare vomiting) | 0 % (apart from intermittent/rare vomiting, hypersalivation and slightly decreased appetite) | 5/7 (71%) | NA | NA | 0% | 11/11 (100%) | 1/6 (17%) | 4/4 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) |
| 95% CI of cases that developed adverse effects | NA | NA | 36-92% | NA | NA | 0% | 100% | 3-56% | 100% | 100% |
| Body system affected and adverse effects | NA | NA | Neurological (sedation (2), ataxia (1)), GI (anorexia (2), PP (1), vomit (2), hypersalivation (1)), PD (1), decreased drinking (1) | Neurological (sedation(5), ataxia(5)), GI (acute hepatic necrosis(11), anorexia (5)) | GI (acute hepatic necrosis) | NA | Neurological (sedation, ataxia) | Neurological (sedation), GI (anorexia, weight loss) | Neurological (sedation, ataxia) GI (anorexia) | GI (anorexia), ClinPath (increased liver enzymes) |
| Most common adverse effects | Intermitent vomit | Intermittent vomit | Sedation, vomit, decreased appetite | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Adverse effect type | I | I | I | I & II | II | NA | I | NA | I | I |
| Proportion of specific adverse effects for each AED based on all study reports | Type I: sedation (1/3; 33%) and ataxia (1/3; 33%), GI signs, i.e. anorexia (1/3; 33%), PP (1/3; 33%), vomiting (1/3; 33%), hypersalivation (1/3; 33%), and PD (1/3; 33%) or decreased water consumption (1/3; 33%) | Type I: sedation and ataxia | Type I: sedation (2/2; 100%), ataxia (1/2; 50%), anorexia (1/2; 50%) and weight loss (1/2; 50%) | Type I: anorexia (2/2; 100%), sedation (1/2; 50%), ataxia (1/2; 50%), increased liver enzymes (1/2; 50%) | ||||||
| Type II: acute hepatic necrosis | ||||||||||
| One study reported no adverse effects | ||||||||||
| Proportion of specific adverse effects for each AED based on the total affected population | Sedation (2/19; 11%), anorexia (2/19; 11%), vomiting (2/19; 11%), ataxia (1/19; 5%), PP (1/19; 5%), hypersalivation (1/19; 5%), PD (1/19; 5%) and decreased drinking (1/19; 5%) | NA | Sedation (12/17; 71%), ataxia (11/17; 65%), anorexia (1/17; 6%) and weight loss (1/17; 6%) | Anorexia (6/6; 100%), sedation (4/6; 67%) ataxia (4/6; 67%) and increased liver enzymes (2/6; 33%) | ||||||
| Weak and good level of evidence for imepitoin’s efficacy and safety profile, respectively | Weak level of evidence for diazepam’s efficacy and safety profile | Weak level of evidence for primidone’s efficacy and safety profile | Weak level of evidence for phenytoin’s efficacy and safety profile | |||||||
AED(s), anti-epileptic drug(s); BID, bis in die (twice daily); CI, confidence interval; GI, gastrointestinal; IE, idiopathic epilepsy; LEV, Levetiracetam; m, month(s); NA, Not Available; PB, phenobarbital; PD, polydipsia; PU, polyuria; PP, polyphagia; PBr, potassium bromide; PO, per os; SID, semel in die (once daily); TID, ter in die (three times daily); w, week(s); year(s); y
Details of feline population size, seizure frequency, treatment time, doses of AED(s), seizure frequency reduction after AED initiation, 95% CI for the successful and affected cases and evidence statements for each study
| References | Hasegawa et al. [ | Brewer et al. [ | Ukai et al. [ | Cautela et al. [ | Pellegrini et al., [ | Zoran et al., [ | Dreimann [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AED evaluated | Zonisamide | Pregabalin | Valproic acid | ||||
| 2nd AED | - | PB (5) | - | - | - | - | |
| 3rd AED | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| 4th AED | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| No of cats | 6 (non-epileptic cats) | 5 | 8 | 6 (non-epileptic cats) | 8 (non-epileptic cats) | 1 (non-epileptic cat) | 6 (non-epileptic cats) |
| Age of cats at seizure onset (years) | NA | NA | median 8.75; range 6.75 -11.5 | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Period of treatment or follow-up (months) | 2.1 | 3 | 0.75 | NA | 0.12-0.25 | NA | 0.5 |
| Dose of AED(s) (mg/kg) | 20 PO SID | mean 11.54; range 6.14-17 PO SID | 2.5 PO BID for a week, then 5 PO BID | 4 PO (one dose only) | range 25- 130 intraperitoneally TID | < 111 PO at once | 40 PO and IV BID |
| Serum levels of AED(s) | median 52.9; mean 56.9 μg/mL | Zonisamide: mean 19.44; range 8.8-38.6 mcg/ml; PB: NA | median 5.9 (2.1–8.3) for a week, then 13.45 (11.9–24.4) | range 2.8-8.2 μg/mL | <5 μg/ml | 3.4 μg/ml | 50-150 μg/ml |
| Pre-treatment SF (seizures/month or year) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Post-treatment SF (seizures/month or year) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| No of cats that were failures | NA | 0 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| No of cats with >0% - <50% reduction in SF | NA | 2/5 (40%) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| No of cats with ≥50% - <100% reduction in SF | NA | 3/5 (60%) | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| No of cats with 100% reduction in SF | NA | 0 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| 95% CI of successfully treated cases | NA | 23%-88% | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Prevalence of adverse effects | 3/6 (50%) | 2/5 (40%) | 0% | 4/6 (67%) | >4/8 (>50%) | NA | 6/6 (100%) |
| 95% CI of cases that developed adverse effects | 19-81% | 12%-77% | 0% | 30-90% | NA | NA | 100% |
| Body system affected and adverse effects | Neurological (sedation, ataxia) GI (vomiting, diarrhea, anorexia) | Neurological (sedation (1)), GI (anorexia (1)) | 0% | Neurological (sedation) | Neurological (sedation, ataxia, drowsiness, head tremor), GI (anorexia) | Neurological (hyperactivity), dermatological (alopecia) | Neurological (sedation), GI (vomiting, anorexia) |
| Most common adverse effects | NA | NA | NA | NA | Sedation, drowsiness, head tremor, anorexia | NA | NA |
| Adverse effect type | I | I | I | I | I & II | I | |
| Proportion of specific adverse effects for each AED based on all study reports | Type I: sedation (2/3; 67%), anorexia (2/3; 67%), ataxia (1/3; 33%), vomiting (1/3; 33%) and diarhoea (1/3; 33%) | Type I: sedation | Type I: sedation (2/3; 67%), anorexia (2/3; 67%), ataxia (1/3; 33%), drowsiness (1/3; 33%), head tremor (1/3; 33%), hyperactivity (1/3; 33%) and vomiting (1/3; 33%) | ||||
| Type II: alopecia (1/3; 33%) | |||||||
| Proportion of specific adverse effects for each AED based on the total affected population | Sedation (4/19; 21%), anorexia (4/19; 21%), ataxia (3/19; 16%), vomiting (3/19; 16%) and diarrhea (3/19; 16%) | NA | Sedation (>10/15; 67%), anorexia (>10/15; 67%), ataxia (>4/15; 27%), drowsiness (>4/15; 17%), head tremor (>4/15; 17%), vomiting (6/15; 40%), hyperactivity (1/15; 7%) and alopecia (1/15; 7%) | ||||
| Overall level of evidence supporting the efficacy and safety profile of an AED | Weak level of evidence for zonisamide’s efficacy and safety profile | Absent and weak level of evidence for pregabalin’s efficacy and safety profile | Absent and weak evidence for valproic acid’s safety profile and efficacy respectively | ||||
AED(s), anti-epileptic drug(s); BID, bis in die (twice daily); CI, confidence interval; GI, gastrointestinal; IE, idiopathic epilepsy; LEV, Levetiracetam; m, month(s); NA, Not Available; PB, phenobarbital; PD, polydipsia; PU, polyuria; PP, polyphagia; PBr, potassium bromide; PO, per os; SID, semel in die (once daily); TID, ter in die (three times daily); w, week(s); year(s); y
Fig. 1Proportion of specific adverse effects for phenobarbital. Each adverse effect represents the percentage of cats that were affected by this with regards to the overall combined population for phenobarbital. The blue and red bars indicate type I and II adverse effects, respectively
Fig. 2Proportion of specific adverse effects for potassium bromide. Each adverse effect represents the percentage of cats that were affected by this with regards to the overall combined population for potassium bromide. The blue and red bars indicate type I and II adverse effects, respectively
Fig. 3Proportion of adverse effects for levetiracetam. Each adverse effect represents the percentage of cats that were affected by this with regards to the overall combined population for levetiracetam. The blue bars indicate type I adverse effects
Fig. 4Proportion of specific adverse effects for imepitoin. Each adverse effect represents the percentage of cats that were affected by this with regards to the overall combined population for imepitoin. The blue bars indicate type I adverse effects
Fig. 5Pyramid of AEDs’ efficacy hierarchy based on the quality of evidence and outcomes assessment
Fig. 6Pyramid of AEDs’ safety hierarchy based on the quality of evidence and outcomes assessment