| Literature DB >> 33336359 |
Abhishek G Sathe1,2, Usha Mishra1, Vijay Ivaturi3, Richard C Brundage2, James C Cloyd1,2, Jordan J Elm4, James M Chamberlain5, Robert Silbergleit6, Jaideep Kapur7, Daniel H Lowenstein8, Shlomo Shinnar9, Hannah R Cock10, Nathan B Fountain11, Lynn Babcock12, Lisa D Coles1,2.
Abstract
Fosphenytoin (FOS) and its active form, phenytoin (PHT), levetiracetam (LEV), and valproic acid (VPA) are commonly used second-line treatments of status epilepticus. However, limited information is available regarding LEV and VPA concentrations following high intravenous doses, particularly in young children. The Established Status Epilepticus Treatment Trial, a blinded, comparative effectiveness study of FOS, LEV, and VPA for benzodiazepine-refractory status epilepticus provided an opportunity to investigate early drug concentrations. Patients aged ≥2 years who continued to seizure despite receiving adequate doses of benzodiazepines were randomly assigned to FOS, LEV, or VPA infused over 10 minutes. A sparse blood-sampling approach was used, with up to 2 samples collected per patient within 2 hours following drug administration. The objective of this work was to report early drug exposure of PHT, LEV, and VPA and plasma protein binding of PHT and VPA. Twenty-seven children with median (interquartile range) age of 4 (2.5-6.5) years were enrolled. The total plasma concentrations ranged from 69 to 151.3 μg/mL for LEV, 11.3 to 26.7 μg/mL for PHT and 126 to 223 μg/mL for VPA. Free fraction ranged from 4% to 19% for PHT and 17% to 51% for VPA. This is the first report in young children of LEV concentrations with convulsive status epilepticus as well as VPA concentrations after a 40 mg/kg dose. Several challenges limited patient enrollment and blood sampling. Additional studies with a larger sample size are required to evaluate the exposure-response relationships in this emergent condition.Entities:
Keywords: central nervous system (CNS); clinical pharmacology (CPH); clinical trials (CTR); emergency medicine (EME); exposure-response; neurology (NEU); pediatrics (PED); pharmacokinetics and drug metabolism; protein binding; sparse sampling
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33336359 PMCID: PMC8089035 DOI: 10.1002/jcph.1801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 0091-2700 Impact factor: 2.860