| Literature DB >> 34427754 |
Vicente Villanueva1, Wendyl D'Souza2, Hiroko Goji3, Dong Wook Kim4, Claudio Liguori5,6, Rob McMurray7, Imad Najm8, Estevo Santamarina9, Bernhard J Steinhoff10,11, Pavel Vlasov12, Tony Wu13, Eugen Trinka14,15,16.
Abstract
The PERaMpanel pooled analysIs of effecTiveness and tolerability (PERMIT) study was a pooled analysis of data from 44 real-world studies from 17 countries, in which people with epilepsy (PWE; focal and generalized) were treated with perampanel (PER). Retention and effectiveness were assessed after 3, 6, and 12 months, and at the last visit (last observation carried forward). Effectiveness assessments included 50% responder rate (≥ 50% reduction in seizure frequency from baseline) and seizure freedom rate (no seizures since at least the prior visit); in PWE with status epilepticus, response was defined as seizures under control. Safety and tolerability were assessed by evaluating adverse events (AEs) and discontinuation due to AEs. The Full Analysis Set included 5193 PWE. Retention, effectiveness and safety/tolerability were assessed in 4721, 4392 and 4617, respectively. Retention on PER treatment at 3, 6, and 12 months was 90.5%, 79.8%, and 64.2%, respectively. Mean retention time on PER treatment was 10.8 months. The 50% responder rate was 58.3% at 12 months and 50.0% at the last visit, and the corresponding seizure freedom rates were 23.2% and 20.5%, respectively; 52.7% of PWE with status epilepticus responded to PER treatment. Overall, 49.9% of PWE reported AEs and the most frequently reported AEs (≥ 5% of PWE) were dizziness/vertigo (15.2%), somnolence (10.6%), irritability (8.4%), and behavioral disorders (5.4%). At 12 months, 17.6% of PWEs had discontinued due to AEs. PERMIT demonstrated that PER is effective and generally well tolerated when used to treat people with focal and/or generalized epilepsy in everyday clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Antiseizure medication; Effectiveness; Focal epilepsy; Generalized epilepsy; Observational study; Tolerability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34427754 PMCID: PMC8940799 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10751-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Overview of studies included in the pooled analysis
| Study name (if applicable) | Country/countries | Design | Population | Number of PWE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rohracher et al. [ | Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, UK | Multicenter Pooled observational data | Several populations typically under-represented in clinical trials | 2396 |
| Kim and Oh [ | Korea | Single-center Prospective | PWE aged ≥ 17 years | 137 |
PERADON Abril Jaramillo et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Prospective | PWE aged ≥ 12 years with FOS and PER as first add-on therapy | 113 |
| Santamarina et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Retrospective | PWE aged ≥ 12 years and PER as first add-on therapy | 144 |
GENERAL Villanueva et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Retrospective | People aged ≥ 12 years with IGE | 149 |
PERADET Coppola et al. [ | Italy | Multicenter Prospective | Adult PWE with brain tumor | 14 |
| Toledo et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Prospective | PWE aged ≥ 16 years with FOS (sleep quality study) | 72 |
| Strzelczyk et al. [ | Austria, Finland, Germany, Spain | Multicenter Retrospective | Adults with status epilepticus | 52 |
| Gil-López et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Retrospective | PWE aged ≥ 16 years with myoclonic seizures | 31 |
| Auvin et al. [ | France | Single center Prospective | Children and adults with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome | 13 |
| Alsaadi et al. [ | United Arab Emirates | Single center Retrospective | People with IGE treated with PER monotherapy | 21 |
| Izumoto et al. [ | Japan | Single center Prospective | Adult PWE with brain tumor | 12 |
| Deleo et al. [ | Italy | Multicenter Prospective | PWE aged ≥ 16 years with drug-resistant focal epilepsy | 56 |
| Maschio et al. [ | Italy | Multicenter Retrospective | Adult PWE with brain tumor | 27 |
| Steinhoff et al. [ | Germany | Single center Retrospective | Adult PWE | 92 |
| Rea et al. [ | Italy | Multicenter Retrospective | Adult PWE and PER as first add-on therapy | 27 |
| Toledano et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Retrospective | PWE aged ≥ 12 years and PER monotherapy | 98 |
| Moraes et al. [ | Australia | Prospective Retrospective | Adult PWE | 93 |
| Chiang et al. [ | Taiwan | Multicenter Retrospective | PWE aged ≥ 16 years | 229 |
| Datta et al. [ | Canada | Single center Retrospective | Pediatric population with epilepsy | 24 |
| Coyle et al. [ | UK | Single center Retrospective | Adult PWE | 23 |
| Ho et al. [ | Taiwan | Single center Retrospective | PWE with refractory status epilepticus | 22 |
| De Liso et al. [ | Italy | Multicenter Retrospective | Children and adolescents with refractory epilepsy | 62 |
| Liguori et al. [ | Italy | Single center Retrospective | Adult PWE | 96 |
| Takahashi et al. [ | Japan | Multicenter Retrospective | PWE with FOS and PER as early add-on vs. late add-on therapy | 51 |
| Morano et al. [ | Italy | Single center Retrospective | PWE with highly refractory epilepsy | 89 |
| Goji and Kanemoto [ | Japan | Single center Prospective | Adult PWE | 128 |
| Rocamora et al. [ | Spain | Retrospective | Adult PWE | 77 |
| Gil-Nagel et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Retrospective | Monotherapy | 60 |
| Vlasov et al. [ | Russia | Multicenter Retrospective | PWE with focal epilepsy | 164 |
| Teijeira et al. [ | Spain | Single center | PWE aged ≥ 12 years and PER as first add-on therapy or monotherapy | 26 |
| Ron et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Prospective | Children with epilepsy | 14 |
| Carreño et al. [ | Spain | Single center Retrospective | PWE with seizures exclusively during sleep | 98 |
| Yamamoto [ | Japan | Retrospective | PWE with PER as early add-on vs. late add-on therapy | 70 |
| Pereagal Osorio et al. [ | Spain | Multicenter Retrospective | Adult PWE with FOS and PER as early add-on therapy | 77 |
| Odintsova [ | Russia | – | PWE | 49 |
| Matricardi et al. [ | Italy | Multicenter Retrospective | PWE with FOS and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome | 58 |
| Valente Fernandes (unpublisheda) | Portugal | – | Brain tumor | 7 |
| Chinvarun [ | Thailand | – | PWE and PER monotherapy | 41 |
| Kristensen [ | Norway | Single center Retrospective | PWE with FOS and PGTCS | 44 |
| Bonanni et al. [ | Italy | – | PWE with intellectual disability | 55 |
| Morillob | Canada | – | Adult PWE | 41 |
| Suller Martic | Canada | – | Adult PWE | 5 |
| Jacobs-LeVand | Canada | – | – | 36 |
FOS focal-onset seizures, IGE idiopathic generalized epilepsy, PER perampanel, PGTCS primary generalized tonic–clonic seizures, PWE people with epilepsy
aPresented at Liga Portuguesa Contra a Epilepsia (LPCE) congress 2019
bHamilton General Hospital, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada (local database)
cLondon Health Science Center, London, Ontario, Canada (local database)
dAlberta Children’s Hospital, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (local database)
Fig. 1Disposition of PWE (Retention Population). AE adverse event, pat patients, PWE people with epilepsy, UK unknown
Demographic and baseline characteristics in the Full Analysis Set, Retention Population, Effectiveness Population and Tolerability Population
| Characteristic | Full Analysis Set | Retention Population | Effectiveness Population | Tolerability Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||||
| 5175 | 4717 | 4376 | 4602 | |
| Female, | 2612 (50.5) | 2365 (50.1) | 2182 (49.9) | 2348 (51.0) |
| Male, | 2563 (49.5) | 2352 (49.9) | 2194 (50.1) | 2254 (49.0) |
| Age | ||||
| 4946 | 4555 | 4309 | 4443 | |
| Mean (SD), years | 39.7 (16.2) | 39.6 (15.9) | 39.5 (16.2) | 39.7 (16.1) |
| Median (range), years | 38.6 (2.0‒97.0) | 38.0 (2.0‒97.0) | 38.0 (2.0‒92.0) | 38.0 (2.0‒97.0) |
| Age category | ||||
| | 5006 | 4606 | 4309 | 4503 |
| < 12 years, | 64 (1.3) | 48 (1.0) | 50 (1.2) | 55 (1.2) |
| ≥ 12‒ < 18 years, | 279 (5.6) | 266 (5.8) | 258 (6.0) | 258 (5.7) |
| ≥ 18‒ < 65 years, | 4284 (85.6) | 3964 (86.1) | 3681 (85.4) | 3854 (85.6) |
| ≥ 65 years | 379 (7.6) | 328 (7.1) | 320 (7.4) | 336 (7.5) |
| Age at epilepsy onset | ||||
| | 4122 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Mean (SD), years | 16.1 (17.2) | |||
| Median (range), years | 12.0 (0.0‒97.0) | |||
| Duration of epilepsy | ||||
| | 4228 | 4051 | 3632 | 3748 |
| Mean (SD), years | 23.5 (16.0) | 23.5 (16.0) | 23.4 (16.0) | 23.7 (16.1) |
| Median (range), years | 21.0 (0.0‒82.0) | 21.0 (0.0‒82.0) | 21.0 (0.0‒82.0) | 21.9 (0.0‒82.0) |
| Etiologyb | ||||
| | 3830 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Structural, | 2013 (52.6) | |||
| Unknown, | 1199 (31.3) | |||
| Genetic, | 475 (12.4) | |||
| Infectious, | 107 (2.8) | |||
| Immune, | 31 (0.8) | |||
| Metabolic, | 3 (0.1) | |||
| Other, | 2 (0.1) | |||
| Epilepsy syndrome | ||||
| | 2495 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| No, | 2037 (81.6) | |||
| Yes, | 458 (18.4) | |||
| Vascular etiology | ||||
| | 2495 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| No, | 2371 (95.0) | |||
| Yes, | 124 (5.0) | |||
| Tumor etiology | ||||
| | 2495 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| No, | 2360 (94.6) | |||
| Yes, | 135 (5.4) | |||
| Learning disability | ||||
| | 2626 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| No, | 1890 (72.0) | |||
| Yes, | 736 (28.0) | |||
| Psychiatric comorbidity | ||||
| | 2661 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| No, | 2027 (76.2) | |||
| Yes, | 634 (23.8) | |||
| Most frequent typesc of psychiatric comorbidity | ||||
| | 2661 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Depression, | 111 (4.2) | |||
| Anxiety, | 89 (3.3) | |||
| Hyperactivity, | 26 (1.0) | |||
| Seizure type | ||||
| | 4083 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Focal | 3911 (81.4) | |||
| Generalized | 604 (12.6) | |||
| Both focal and generalized | 214 (4.5) | |||
| Status epilepticus | 74 (1.5) | |||
| Number of previous ASMs | ||||
| | 3999 | 3760 | 3407 | 3568 |
| Mean (SD) | 4.9 (3.9) | 4.9 (3.9) | 4.9 (3.9) | 4.8 (3.9) |
| Median (range) | 4.0 (0‒19) | 4.0 (0‒19) | 4.0 (0‒19) | 4.0 (0‒19) |
| Number of previous ASMs | ||||
| | 3999 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| 0, | 451 (11.3) | |||
| 1, | 428 (10.7) | |||
| 2, | 459 (11.5) | |||
| 3, | 405 (10.1) | |||
| 4, | 353 (8.8) | |||
| 5, | 296 (7.4) | |||
| ≥ 6, | 1607 (40.2) | |||
| Most frequently usedd previous ASMs | ||||
| | 1332 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Levetiracetam, | 330 (24.8) | |||
| Valproate, | 300 (22.5) | |||
| Carbamazepine, | 261 (19.6) | |||
| Topiramate, | 261 (19.6) | |||
| Lamotrigine, | 182 (13.7) | |||
| Phenytoin, | 170 (12.8) | |||
| Number of concomitant ASMs | ||||
| | 4916 | 4561 | 4185 | 4344 |
| Mean (SD) | 2.2 (1.2) | 2.3 (1.1) | 2.2 (1.1) | 2.3 (1.1) |
| Median (range) | 2.0 (0‒7) | 2.0 (0‒7) | 2.0 (0‒7) | 2.0 (0‒7) |
| Number of concomitant ASMs | ||||
| | 4916 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| 0, | 269 (5.5) | |||
| 1, | 1031 (21.0) | |||
| 2, | 1681 (34.2) | |||
| 3, | 1313 (26.7) | |||
| ≥ 4, | 622 (12.7) | |||
| Most frequently usedd concomitant ASMs | ||||
| | 4756 | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Levetiracetam, | 1777 (37.4) | |||
| Valproate, | 1172 (24.6) | |||
| Lamotrigine, | 1120 (23.5) | |||
| Carbamazepine, | 1028 (21.6) | |||
| Lacosamide, | 930 (19.6) | |||
| Clobazam, | 750 (15.8) | |||
| Zonisamide, | 617 (13.0) | |||
| Topiramate, | 507 (10.7) | |||
| Oxcarbazepine, | 486 (10.2) | |||
| Types of concomitant ASMs | ||||
| | 4756 | 4408 | 4028 | 4184 |
| Enzyme inducers,e
| 2365 (49.7) | 2250 (51.0) | 2048 (50.8) | 2134 (51.0) |
| Sodium channel blockers,f
| 3368 (70.8) | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| ASMs targeting the GABA system,g
| 1507 (31.7) | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Calcium channel blockers,h
| 254 (5.3) | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Potassium channel blockers,i
| 93 (2.0) | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| Synaptic vesicle protein-2 modulators,j
| 1809 (38.0) | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
| ASMs with mixed mode of action,k
| 2022 (42.5) | ‒ | ‒ | ‒ |
ASM antiseizure medication, GABA gamma aminobutyric acid, PWE people with epilepsy, SD standard deviation
aNumber of PWE for whom datum in question was available
bInternational League Against Epilepsy 2017 classification
c ≥ 1% of PWE
d ≥ 10% of PWE
eDefined as carbamazepine, eslicarbazepine acetate, oxcarbazepine, phenobarbital, phenytoin and primidone
fDefined as carbamazepine, eslicarbazepine acetate, lacosamide, lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine, phenytoin and rufinamide
gDefined as clobazam, clonazepam, diazepam, phenobarbital, primidone, tiagabine and vigabatrin
hDefined as ethosuximide, gabapentin and pregabalin
iDefined as retigabine
jDefined as brivaracetam and levetiracetam
kDefined as felbamate, stiripentol, topiramate, valproate and zonisamide
Fig. 2Kaplan–Meier curve for retention on PER treatment over 12 months (Retention Population). PER perampanel
Fig. 3Multivariate analyses of relationships between baseline characteristics and a retention (Retention Population), b response to PER treatment (Effectiveness Population) and c seizure freedom (Effectiveness Population). Seizure freedom was defined as no seizures since at least the prior visit. Response was defined as ≥ 50% seizure frequency reduction from baseline. ASM antiseizure medication, AUC area under the curve, CI confidence interval, OR odds ratio
Fig. 4Median monthly frequencies (with P25 and P75 IQR) at baseline, Month 3, Month 6, Month 12 and the last visit for a total seizures, b focal seizures, c focal aware seizures, d focal impaired awareness seizures, e focal to bilateral tonic–clonic seizures, f primary generalized seizures, g primary generalized tonic–clonic seizures, h generalized tonic seizures, i absence seizures, j myoclonic seizures, and k days with myoclonic seizures. IQR interquartile range, P percentile
Fig. 5Responder rate, seizure freedom rate, and percentage of PWE with worsened seizure frequency (relative to baseline) at Month 3, Month 6, Month 12 and the last visit. Response was defined as ≥ 50% reduction in seizure frequency from baseline. Seizure freedom was defined as no seizures since at least the prior visit; therefore, seizure freedom rates at Month 3, Month 6 and the last visit represent the percentages of PWE who had no seizures for ≥ 3 months, and the seizure freedom rate at Month 12 represents the percentage of PWE who had no seizures for ≥ 6 months. PWE people with epilepsy
Summary of AEs (Tolerability Population)
| Total PWE | |
|---|---|
| PWE with any AE | |
| | 4617 |
| | 2303 (49.9) |
| Most frequently reported AEsb | |
| | 4617 |
| Dizziness/vertigo, | 701 (15.2) |
| Somnolence, | 491 (10.6) |
| Irritability, | 386 (8.4) |
| Behavioral disorders, | 249 (5.4) |
| Instability/ataxia, | 188 (4.1) |
| Fatigue, | 170 (3.7) |
| Mood disturbance, | 100 (2.2) |
| Weight increased, | 94 (2.0) |
| Headache, | 77 (1.7) |
| Anxiety, | 70 (1.5) |
| Aggression, | 64 (1.4) |
| Depression, | 55 (1.2) |
| PWE with AEs leading to discontinuation | |
| 12 months | |
| | 4201 |
| | 739 (17.6) |
| Longer term (> 12 months) | |
| | 4164 |
| | 856 (20.6) |
| PWE with any psychiatric AE | |
| | 4590 |
| | 965 (21.0) |
| PWE with psychiatric AEs leading to discontinuation | |
| | 4294 |
| | 414 (9.6) |
| Most frequently reported psychiatric AEs leading to discontinuationb | |
| | 4617 |
| Irritability, | 141 (3.1) |
| Behavioral disorders, | 127 (2.8) |
| Mood disturbance, | 53 (1.1) |
AE adverse event, PWE people with epilepsy
aNumber of PWE for whom datum in question was available
b > 1% of PWE