| Literature DB >> 29559784 |
Lanlan Zhang1, Chengzhong Wang1, Wei Li2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate clinical efficacy, safety, and tolerability of levetiracetam as mono- or adjunctive therapy in the treatment of children and adolescents with epilepsy.Entities:
Keywords: RCT; antiepileptic drug; children; efficacy; epilepsy; levetiracetam
Year: 2018 PMID: 29559784 PMCID: PMC5857150 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S151413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Figure 1Study-selection process for this meta-analysis.
Characteristics of RCTs included in this meta-analysis
| Study | Country | Patients, n | Age, years (mean ± SD or mean [range]) | Sex | Type | Dose | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen et al | China | Lev 55 | 9.8±3.5 | 58/45 | All types | 20–40 | 6 |
| Sun and Zhou | China | Lev 34 | 7.26±1.62 | 20/14 | Focal and general | 20–60 | 6 |
| Shan | China | Lev 53 | 8.58 (4.4–15) | 29/24 | BCECTS | 10–40 | 12 |
| Fattore et al | Italy | Lev 38 | 8.7±2.2 | 15/23 | Absence of epilepsy | 10–30 | 2 weeks |
| Zhang et al | China | Lev 41 | 6.82±2.79 | 56/52 | Partial | 5–50 | 12 |
| Liu et al | China | Lev 50 | 7.6±2.6 | ND | All types | 10–40 | 3 |
| Borggraefe et al | Germany | Lev 21 | 8.7±1.7 | 15/6 | BCECTS | 10–30 | 24 weeks |
| Yu | China | Lev 30 | 8.5±2.8 | 37/23 | BCECTS | 20–40 | 16 weeks |
| Piña-Garza et al | USA | Lev 60 | 23.4 months | 30/30 | Partial | 20–50 | 5 days |
| Huang and Zhu | China | Lev 27 | 6 | 11/16 | Partial | 10–40 | 6 |
| Coppola et al | Italy | Lev 21 | 10.5 (5–13) | 11/10 | BCECTS | 5–30 | 18 |
| Hu et al | China | Lev 40 | 7.0±2.1 | 22/18 | All types | 5–60 | 6 |
| Levisohn et al | USA | Lev 64 | 10.6±3.5 | 39/25 | Partial | 20–60 | 12 weeks |
Abbreviations: RCTs, randomized controlled trials; Lev, levetiracetam; Oxc, oxcarbazepine; Vpa, valproate; Pbo, placebo; Stm, sulthiame; Cbz, carbamazepine; ND, no data; BCECTS, benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes.
Figure 2Risk-of-bias summary.
Note: low risk; high risk; unclear risk.
GRADE evidence profile
| Quality assessment
| Patients, n
| Effect
| Quality | Importance | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies, n | Design | Limitations | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | 100% | Control | RR (95% CI) | Absolute | ||
| 13 | Randomized trials | Very serious | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | Strong association | 258/534 (48.3%) | 207/479 (43.2%) | 1.09 (0.92–1.3) | 39 more per 1,000 (from 35 fewer to 130 more) | +− | Critical |
| ≥ | ||||||||||||
| 13 | Randomized trials | Very serious | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | Strong association | 386/534 | 332/479 (69.3%) | 1.05 (0.95–1.15) | 35 more per 1,000 (from 35 fewer to 104 more) | +− | Important |
| 13 | Randomized trials | Very serious | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None | 167/534 (31.3%) | 150/479 (31.3%) | 0.9 (0.77–1.06) | 31 fewer per 1,000 (from 72 fewer to 19 more) | +− | Important |
Notes:
Four trials15,23,24,26 were regarded as having a high risk of bias;
three trials17,21,25 compared levetiracetam with placebo for seizure-free rate (RR 4.26, 95% CI 1.90–9.45; P<0.05);
three trials17,21,25 compared levetiracetam with placebo for seizure-frequency reduction from baseline ≥50% (RR 1.79, 95% CI 1.26–2.53; P<0.05).
Abbreviations: GRADE, Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation.
Figure 3Forest plot of seizure-free rate: levetiracetam versus other AEDs.
Abbreviations: MH, Mantel–Haenszel; AEDs, antiepileptic drugs.
Figure 4Forest plot of seizure-frequency reduction ≥50% from baseline: levetiracetam versus other AEDs.
Abbreviations: MH, Mantel–Haenszel; AEDs, antiepileptic drugs.
Figure 5Forest plot of adverse events: levetiracetam versus other AEDs.
Abbreviations: MH, Mantel–Haenszel; AEDs, antiepileptic drugs.