| Literature DB >> 30450485 |
Melissa Barker-Haliski1, Lauren C Harte-Hargrove2, Teresa Ravizza3, Ilse Smolders4, Bo Xiao5, Claudia Brandt6,7, Wolfgang Löscher6,7.
Abstract
Preclinical pharmacology studies in animal models of seizures and epilepsy have provided a platform to identify more than 20 antiseizure drugs in recent decades. To minimize variability in lab-to-lab studies and to harmonize approaches to data collection and reporting methodology in pharmacologic evaluations of the next generation of therapies, we present common data elements (CDEs), case report forms (CRFs), and this companion manuscript to help with the implementation of methods for studies in established preclinical seizure and epilepsy models in adult rodents. The development of and advocacy for CDEs in preclinical research has been encouraged previously by both clinical and preclinical groups. It is anticipated that adoption and implementation of these CDEs in preclinical studies may help standardize approaches to minimize variability and increase the reproducibility of preclinical studies. Moreover, they may provide a methodologic framework for pharmacology studies in atypical animal models or models in development, which may ultimately promote novel therapy development. In the present document, we refer selectively to animal models that have a long history of preclinical use, and in some cases, are clinically validated.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models of epilepsy; Antiseizure drug discovery; Chemoconvulsive models; Electroconvulsive models; Kindled rodent models; Phenytoin; Status epilepticus models
Year: 2018 PMID: 30450485 PMCID: PMC6210039 DOI: 10.1002/epi4.12254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epilepsia Open ISSN: 2470-9239
Human correlate and pharmacology of acute animal model CRFs
| Animal model | Seizure phenotype | Human correlate | Predictive validity | Acutely effective antiseizure drugs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maximal electroshock | Tonic‐extension seizure | Generalized tonic–clonic seizures | Yes | PHT, CBZ, OxCBZ, VPA, PB, FBM, GBP, LTG, LCM, TPM, ZNS, EZG |
| 6 Hz test | Limbic seizures secondarily generalized | Pharmacoresistant focal seizures secondarily generalized | Undefined; suggested model of pharmacoresistant seizures | CBZ, FBM, LCM, LEV, EZG, VPA |
| Subcutaneous pentylenetetrazol | Minimal clonic seizure | Generalized myoclonic seizure | Yes | ESM, VPA, BZD, EZG, FBM, GBP, PB |
| Kindled rodent | Limbic seizures secondarily generalized | Focal seizures secondarily generalized | Yes | CBZ, OxCBZ, PHT, VPA, PB, BZD, FBM, GBP, PGB, LCM, LTG, TPM, TGB, ZNS, LVT, VGB, EZG |
| Chemonconvulsant and electrically induced status epilepticus models (acute) | Acute status epilepticus | Acute status epilepticus | Yes | BDZ, CBZ, VPA, PB |
| Post‐status epilepticus models | Spontaneous recurrent seizures | Temporal lobe epilepsy | Unknown | CBZ, |
BDZ, benzodiazepine; CBZ, carbamazepine; ESM, ethosuximide; EZG, ezogabine; FBM, felbamate; GBP, gabapentin; LCM, lacosamide; LTG, lamotrigine; LVT, levetiracetam; OxCBZ, oxcarbazepine; PB, phenobarbital; PGB, pregabalin; PHT, phenytoin; TGB, tiagabine; TPM, topiramate; VPA, valproic acid; VGB, vigabatrin; ZNS, zonisamide.
PB, TGB, and VGB block clonic seizures induced by s.c. PTZ but are inactive against generalized absence seizures and may exacerbate spike wave seizures.
List of CRFs/CDEs discussed in this companion manuscript. Files can be located online as Supplemental Material
| CRF/CDE module name | Primary study objective | Route of seizure induction | Outcome measures |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 General core pharmacology | Pharmacologic testing information | N/A | Drug information (route of administration, frequency, vehicle, solubility, etc.) |
| 2 MES and MEST | Antiseizure test | Electroconvulsant | Maximal electroshock seizure and maximal electroshock seizure threshold ‐ individual seizure response; population seizure threshold |
| 3 Acute 6 Hz | Antiseizure test | Electroconvulsant | 6 Hz seizure and 6 Hz seizure threshold – individual seizure response; population seizure threshold |
| 4 Subcutaneous chemoconvulsant | Antiseizure test | Chemoconvulsant | Chemonconvulsant seizure and chemoconvulsant seizure threshold – individual seizure response; population seizure threshold |
| 5 Timed intravenous chemoconvulsant infusion test | Antiseizure test | Chemoconvulsant | Chemoconvulsant seizure threshold – individual seizure threshold response |
| 6 Intracerebral electrical kindling | Antiseizure test; antiepileptogenesis test | Electroconvulsant | Antiseizure testing: acute protection from seizures; antiepileptogenesis testing: modification of kindling acquisition or behavioral comorbidities |
| 7 Corneal kindling | Antiseizure test; antiepileptogenesis test | Electroconvulsant | Antiseizure testing: acute protection from seizures; antiepileptogenesis testing: modification of kindling acquisition or behavioral comorbidities |
| 8 Chemoconvulsant kindling | Antiseizure test; antiepileptogenesis test | Chemoconvulsant | Antiseizure testing: acute protection from seizures; antiepileptogenesis testing: modification of kindling acquisition or behavioral comorbidities |
| 9 CS_SE | Antiseizure test; antiepileptogenesis test | Chemoconvulsant | Antiseizure testing: modification of SE, or protection from acute symptomatic seizures; antiepileptogenesis testing: modification of SRS frequency, or behavioral comorbidities, or neuropathology |
| 10 CS_ESE | Antiseizure test; antiepileptogenesis test | Electroconvulsant (self‐sustained) | Antiseizure testing: modification of SE, or protection acute symptomatic seizures; antiepileptogenesis testing: modification of SRS frequency, or behavioral comorbidities, or neuropathology |
| 11 CS_fKASE | Antiseizure test; antiepileptogenesis test | Chemoconvulsant | Antiseizure testing: modification of SE, or protection from acute symptomatic seizures; antiepileptogenesis testing: modification of SRS frequency, or behavioral comorbidities, or neuropathology |
Figure 1Hypothetical dose‐response curve calculation for Compound X by the Probit method. The ED50 is calculated to be 33.46 mg/kg [95% confidence intervals 25.42–43.03]. The black line indicates the calculated regression line and black dots represent actual data points for each treatment group. Line slope of 6.32 and standard error of 2.08. For an accurate ED50 calculation, the 95% confidence intervals should fall within the dose range tested.