| Literature DB >> 30258398 |
Fabricio A Pamplona1, Lorenzo Rolim da Silva2, Ana Carolina Coan3.
Abstract
This meta-analysis paper describes the analysis of observational clinical studies on the treatment of refractory epilepsy with cannabidiol (CBD)-based products. Beyond attempting to establish the safety and efficacy of such products, we also investigated if there is enough evidence to assume any difference in efficacy between CBD-rich extracts compared to purified CBD products. The systematic search took place in February/2017 and updated in December/2017 using the keywords "epilepsy" or "Dravet" or "Lennox-Gastaut" or "CDKL5" combined with "Cannabis," "cannabinoid," "cannabidiol," or "CBD" resulting in 199 papers. The qualitative assessment resulted in 11 valid references, with an average impact factor of 8.1 (ranging from 1.4 to 47.8). The categorical data of a total of 670 patients were analyzed by Fischer test. The average daily dose ranged between 1 and 50 mg/kg, with treatment length from 3 to 12 months (mean 6.2 months). Two thirds of patients reported improvement in the frequency of seizures (399/622, 64%). There were more reports of improvement from patients treated with CBD-rich extracts (318/447, 71%) than patients treated with purified CBD (81/175, 46%), [corrected] with statistical significance (p < 0.0001). Nevertheless, when the standard clinical threshold of a "50% reduction or more in the frequency of seizures" was applied, only 39% of the individuals were considered "responders," and there was no difference (p = 0.52) [corrected] between treatments with CBD-rich extracts (122/330, 37%) [corrected] and purified CBD (94/223, 42%). Patients treated with CBD-rich extracts reported lower average dose (6.0 mg/kg/day) [DOSAGE ERROR CORRECTED] than those using purified CBD (25.3 mg/kg/day). [DOSAGE ERROR CORRECTED] The reports of mild (158/216 76% vs. 148/447, 33% p < 0.001) and severe (41/155, 26% vs. 23/328, 7% p < 0.0001) [corrected] adverse effects were more frequent in products containing purified CBD than in CBD-rich extracts. CBD-rich extracts seem to present a better therapeutic profile than purified CBD, at least in this population of patients with refractory epilepsy. The roots of this difference is likely due to synergistic effects of CBD with other phytocompounds (aka Entourage effect), but this remains to be confirmed in controlled clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: cannabidiol (CBD); cannabinoids; epilepsy; meta-analysis; phytotherapy; refractory epilepsy
Year: 2018 PMID: 30258398 PMCID: PMC6143706 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1FLOW diagram of the reference searches.
Information about the clinical studies included as valid reference in the current meta-analysis.
| CBD pure ( | Langone Med. Center | Prospective medical record | 137 | 10.5 year | 3 months |
| CBD pure ( | Child Neurology, Child Hosp. Philadelphia (USA) | Prospective medical record | 7 | NR | 12 months |
| CBD pure ( | Pediatric Epilepsy, Mass. Gen. Hospital-Harvard (USA) | Prospective medical record | 13 | 10.8 year | 2 months |
| CBD pure ( | Pediatric Epilepsy, Mass. Gen. Hospital-Harvard (USA) | Prospective medical record | 18 | 14 year | ~9 months |
| CBD pure ( | Langone Med. Center | Prospective medical record | 48 | 11.7 year | 3 months |
| CBD-rich extract ( | Neurology, Stanford (USA) | Parent survey | 19 | 6.2 year | 8 months |
| CBD-rich extract ( | Pediatric Neurology, | Parent survey | 117 | 6 year | 6.8 months |
| CBD-rich extract ( | Pediatrics and Neurology, | Retrospective medical record | 75 | 7.3 year | 5.6 months |
| CBD-rich extract ( | Pediatric Neurology, Sheba Medical Center | Retrospective medical record | 74 | ~10 year | 6 months |
| CBD-rich extract ( | Inst. Tec. Est. Sup. Monterrey | Parent survey | 53 | ~9.4 year | 4.2 months |
| CBD-rich extract ( | Pediatrics and Neurology, | Retrospective medical record | 119 | 7.5 year | 11.7 months |
Average treatment duration.
Efficacy of treatments in the reduction of convulsive seizures (heterogeneous population).
| CBD pure ( | 137 | 37% | 37% | 22% | 22.9 mg/kg |
| CBD pure ( | 7 | 86% | 71% | 57% | 22 mg/kg |
| CBD pure ( | 13 | 85% | 70% | 46% | 24.6 mg/kg |
| CBD pure ( | 18 | 72% | 50% | 22% | 37.7 mg/kg |
| CBD pure ( | 48 | NR | 42% | NR | 28.2 mg/kg |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 19 | 84% | 74% | 42% | 7.0 mg/kg |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 117 | 85% | NR | NR | 4.3 mg/kg |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 75 | 57% | 33% | NR | NR |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 74 | 89% | 34% | 18% | <10 mg/kg |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 43 | 83% | 67% | 42% | 3.2 mg/kg |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 119 | 49% | 24% | NR | NR |
Endpoints: any improvement reported, improvement > 50% (“clinical responder”) and >70%, and average dose reported. NR, not reported; ?, inconclusive.
Figure 2Scatterplot diagram of treatment efficacy, according to the data of “clinical improvement” reported in the aforementioned clinical studies. The X-axis represents the rate of clinical improvement (from 0 to 1, 100% = 1). The Y-axis is arbitrary “Study ID.” The size of each point represents the number of patients included in the study and gives an idea of the “weight” of each study. The dotted line is the average, regardless of treatment. Each type of treatment (Purified CBD vs. CBD-rich extracts) is coded with a different color, according to the legend. Same data as Table 1, except for one study (10) due to unreported data.
Positive secondary effects of treatment with CBD-rich Cannabis extracts and purified CBD described as secondary endpoints in the clinical studies.
| CBD pure ( | 9/14 | NR | 86% | 67% | NR | NR | NR |
| CBD pure ( | 47 | 57% | 68% | 42% | NR | 67% | NR |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 19 | 79% | 74% | 32% | 68% | NR | NR |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 117 | 63% | 71% | NR | 53% | NR | NR |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 75 | NR | 33% | 33% | 7% | 11% | 11% |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 74 | NR | 34% | 34% | 11% | 15% | 15% |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 43 | 83% | 89% | NR | 77% | NR | NR |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 119 | NR | 39% | NR | 7% | NR | 8% |
Only those reported by at least 5% of the study population are listed. NR, not reported.
Negative secondary effects of treatment with CBD-rich Cannabis extracts and purified CBD described as secondary endpoints in the clinical studies.
| CBD pure ( | 137 | 79% | 30% | 128/137 |
| CBD pure ( | 18 | 67% | 0% | 12/18 |
| CBD pure ( | 13 | 77% | NR | 10/13 |
| CBD pure ( | 48 | 58% | NR | 28/48 |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 19 | 37% | 0% | 7/19 |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 117 | 30% | 0% | 35/117 |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 75 | 44% | 13% | 33/75 |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 74 | 46% | 18% | 34/74 |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 43 | 37% | 0% | 16/43 |
| CBD-rich extract ( | 119 | 19% | NR | 23/119 |
.