| Literature DB >> 31013866 |
Serena Silvestro1, Santa Mammana2, Eugenio Cavalli3, Placido Bramanti4, Emanuela Mazzon5.
Abstract
Cannabidiol (CBD) is one of the cannabinoids with non-psychotropic action, extracted from Cannabis sativa. CBD is a terpenophenol and it has received a great scientific interest thanks to its medical applications. This compound showed efficacy as anti-seizure, antipsychotic, neuroprotective, antidepressant and anxiolytic. The neuroprotective activity appears linked to its excellent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the use of CBD, in addition to common anti-epileptic drugs, in the severe treatment-resistant epilepsy through an overview of recent literature and clinical trials aimed to study the effects of the CBD treatment in different forms of epilepsy. The results of scientific studies obtained so far the use of CBD in clinical applications could represent hope for patients who are resistant to all conventional anti-epileptic drugs.Entities:
Keywords: cannabidiol; clinical trials; treatment-resistant epilepsy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31013866 PMCID: PMC6514832 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24081459
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Structure of CBD.
Completed cannabidiol clinical trials in epilepsy (https://clinicaltrials.gov/). The table shows the efficacy and safety of CBD in different forms of epilepsy. In all studies, CBD is used as adjunctive therapy to conventional antiepileptic drugs.
| Identifier | Study Title | Subjects | Conditions | CBD Dose | Concomitant AEDs | Efficacy | Security | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02987114 | A Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability and Efficacy of Oral Administration of PTL101 (Cannabidiol) as an Adjunctive Treatment for Pediatric Intractable Epilepsy | 16 children (2 to 15 years) | Pediatric Intractable Epilepsy | 25–450 mg/kg/day | - | - | - | - |
| NCT02324673 | Cannabidiol Oral Solution in Pediatric Participants With Treatment-resistant Seizure Disorders | 61 children (1 to 17 years) | Resistant Seizure Disorders | 10, 20, 40 mg/kg/day | - | Improvement of illness | SAEs in 5% of patients with medium-dose and in 9.5% with high-dose | - |
| NCT02551731 | Cannabidiol Oral Solution for Treatment of Refractory Infantile Spasms | 9 infants (6 to 36 Months) | Refractory Infantile Spasms | 20–40 mg/kg/day | - | Complete resolution of spasm in 14.3% of children after 14 days of treatment | No SAEs were recorded | - |
| NCT02318602 | Cannabidiol Oral Solution as an Adjunctive Treatment for Treatment-resistant Seizure Disorder | 52 children and young adults (1 to 18 years) | Treatment-resistant Seizure Disorder | 10, 20, 40 mg/kg/day | - | - | SAEs in 77.78% of infants, in 38.46% of children and in 0% of adults | - |
| NCT02224703 | GWPCARE2 A Study to Investigate the Efficacy and Safety of Cannabidiol (GWP42003-P) in Children and Young Adults With Dravet Syndrome | 150 children and young adults (2 to 18 years) | Dravet Syndrome | 10, 20 mg/kg/day | - | - | - | - |
| NCT02695537 | Safety, and Tolerability of Epidiolex In Patients (Ages 1–19 Years) With Intractable Epilepsy | 100 children and young adults (1 to 18 years) | Intractable Epilepsy | 5–50 mg/kg/day | CLB, Valproate, Levetiracetam, Phenobarbital, Clonazepam, Phenytoin, Carbamazepine, Lamotrigine, Oxcarbazepine, Ethosuximide, Topiramate, | - | 4 children with concomitant valproate showed elevate damage of liver function | [ |
| Reduction of seizures of 63.6% after 12 weeks of treatment | Improvement of AE Profile | [ | ||||||
| NCT02700412 | University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Adult CBD Program | 100 children and adults (15 to 99 years) | EpilepsySeizures | 5–50 mg/kg/day | - | 4 children with concomitant valproate showed elevate damage of liver function | [ | |
| Reduction of seizures of 63.6% after 12 weeks of treatment | Improvement of AE Profile | [ | ||||||
| NCT02224560 | Efficacy and Safety of GWP42003-P for Seizures Associated With Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome in Children and Adults (GWPCARE3) | 225 children and adults (2 to 55 years) | Epilepsy Lennox Gastaut Syndrome | 10, 20 mg/kg/day | CLB | The median percent reduction in seizures frequency from baseline was 37.2% in the 10 mg/kg/day CBD group; 41.9% in the 20 mg/kg/day CBD group | SAEs were reported in 19.40% of patients at the dose of 10 mg/kg/day of the CBD and in 15.85% at the 20 mg/kg/day | [ |
| NCT02091206 | A Dose-ranging Pharmacokinetics and Safety Study of GWP42003-P in Children With Dravet Syndrome (GWPCARE1) | 34 children (4 to 10 years) | Dravet Syndrome | 5, 10, 20 mg/kg/day | CLB | - | TEAEs in 5 patients; SAE in 10% of patients at the dose of 5 mg/kg/day, in 25% at the 10 mg/kg/day and in 11.11% at the 20 mg/kg/day dose. | [ |
| NCT02091375 | Antiepileptic Efficacy Study of GWP42003-P in Children and Young Adults With Dravet Syndrome (GWPCARE1) | 120 children, young adults (2 to 18 years) | Dravet Syndrome | 20 mg/kg/day | CLB | The median frequency of seizures decreased from 12.4 to 5.9, compared to the placebo-treated group | SAEs in 16.39% of patients | [ |
| NCT02224690 | A Study to Investigate the Efficacy and Safety of Cannabidiol (GWP42003-P; CBD) as Adjunctive Treatment for Seizures Associated With Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome in Children and Adults (GWPCARE4) | 171 children and adults (2 to 55 years) | Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome | 20 mg/kg/day | CLB | The monthly frequency of seizures decreased by a median of 43,·9% from baseline in the CBD group | Serious TEAEs occurred in 4 patients;SAEs in 23.26% of patients. 16 of the 36 patients on valproate had transaminase elevations | [ |
| NCT02224573 | GWPCARE5 - An Open Label Extension Study of Cannabidiol (GWP42003-P) in Children and Young Adults With Dravet or Lennox-Gastaut Syndromes | 264 children, and adults (2 years and older) | Dravet Syndrome Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome | - | CLB | The monthly frequency of seizures decreased by a median ranged from 38% to 44% | SAEs in 29.2% of patients | [ |
| NCT02565108 | A Randomized Controlled Trial to Investigate Possible Drug-drug Interactions Between Clobazam and Cannabidiol | 20 adults (18 to 65 years) | Epilepsy | 20 mg/kg/day | CLB | All participants reduced the maintenance dose of CBD from 10% for the day | 2 patients withdrew from the study due to SAEs (seizure cluster) | - |
| NCT02564952 | An Open-label Extension Study to Investigate Possible Drug-drug Interactions Between Clobazam and Cannabidiol | 18 adults (18 to 65 years) | Epilepsy | Initial 20 mg/kg/d titrated to maximum dose of 30 mg/kg/day | CLB | - | SAEs in 11% of patients | - |
CBD: Cannabidiol; TEAEs: Treatment-emergent adverse events; SAEs: serious adverse events; AST: aspartate transferase; ALT: alanine transferase.
Data obtained from trials authorized by local ethics committees (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/). The table shows the efficacy and safety of CBD in different forms of epilepsy. In all studies, CBD is used as adjunctive therapy to conventional antiepileptic drugs.
| Study Design | Subjects | Conditions | CBD Dose | Concomitant AEDs | Efficacy | Safety | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A prospective, open-label, expanded access study | 214 children and adults (1 to 30 years) | Drug Resistant Epilepsy | Initial 2–5 mg/kg/day titrated to maximum dose of 50 mg/kg/day | CLB | The median reduction in monthly motor seizure was of 36.5% | Treatment-related SAEs were recorded in 20 patients; | [ |
| A prospective, open-label study | Children and adults (1 to 30 years) | Drug Resistant Epilepsy | Initial 2–5 mg/kg/day, titrated to maximum dose of 50 mg/kg/day | - | Overall quality of life significantly improved in 48 patients, The median monthly seizures frequency was 13.9 | - | [ |
| A prospective, multicentre, open-label study | 55 children and adults (1 to 30 years) | Epilepsy Dravet Syndrome CDKL5 deficiency disorder Aicardi Doose syndromes Dup15q syndromes | Initial 5 mg/kg/day titrated to maximum dose of 50 mg/kg/day | CLB | Median monthly convulsive seizure frequency decreased from baseline by 51.4% at week 12 and by 59.1% at week 48 | A serious treatment-emergent AEs such as status epilepticus (9%) and respiratory infection (5%) | [ |
| A prospective, open-label study | 40 children (1 to 17 years) | Drug Resistant Epilepsy | Initial 5 mg/kg/day titrated to maximum dose of 25 mg/kg/day | - | 12 patients reported substantial improvement of the condition | 4 patients withdrew from the study because of AEs; | [ |
| A prospective, multiple center, open-label study | 607 children (average age 13 years) | Drug Resistant Epilepsy | Initial 2–10 mg/kg/day to maximum dose of 50 mg/kg/day | A median monthly seizure frequency of 51% was recorded after 12 months of treatment and maintained at weeks 96 | SAEs were reported in 33% of patients; | [ | |
| Expanded access program | 5 infants (1 to 45 months) | Sturge-Weber Syndrome | 2–25 mg/kg/day | Levetiracetam | 50% of seizures reductions in all patients; Improvements in quality of life in all patients | AEs were recorded during the study | [ |
| Retrospective study | 210 children (≤ 19 years) | Epilepsy | 2.9, 5.8 mg/kg/day | CLB | 50% in seizures reduction in 33% of patients in the CBD group; in 44% of CBD + CLB and in 38% of CLB group | AEs in 36% of patients in the CLB group and in 7% of patients in CBD + CLB group | [ |
| Expand access investigational new drug (IND) trial | 13 children and young (4 to 19 years) | Refractory Epilepsy | 5–25 mg/kg/day | CLB | 50% of reduction in seizures in 69.23% of patients | No serious AEs in 77% of patients | [ |
| Open-label, fixed-sequence trial | 78 healthy subjects | - | 750 mg twice daily | CLB | - | Moderate AEs in 8 patients; mild AEs in most of patients | [ |
| Expanded access study | 18 children and adults (2 to 31 years) | Tuberous Sclerosis Complex | 5–50 mg/kg/day | CLB | 4 patients recorded a reduction in seizure rate greater than 80%; 1 patient became seizures-free | AEs in 66.7% of patients | [ |
| Expanded access program | 26 children (1 to 17 years) | Refractory epilepsy | 5–25 mg/kg/day | CLB | A 50% reduction in seizures | SAEs in 23.1% of patients | [ |
CBD: Cannabidiol; TEAEs: Treatment-emergent adverse events; SAEs: serious adverse events.