A Pilot Randomized, Controlled, Double-Blind Trial of Bumetanide to Treat Neonatal
SeizuresSoul JS, Bergin AM, Stopp C, et al. Ann Neurol. 2021;89(2):327-340. doi:
10.1002/ana.25959. Epub 2020 Dec 3. PMID: 33201535
Objective
In the absence of controlled trials, treatment of neonatal seizures has changed
minimally despite poor drug efficacy. We tested bumetanide added to phenobarbital to
treat neonatal seizures in the first trial to include a standard-therapy control
group.
Methods
A randomized, double-blind, dose-escalation design was employed. Neonates with
postmenstrual age 33 to 44 weeks at risk of or with seizures were eligible. Subjects
with electroencephalography (EEG)-confirmed seizures after ≥20 and <40 mg/kg
phenobarbital were randomized to receive additional phenobarbital with either placebo
(control) or .1, .2, or .3 mg/kg bumetanide (treatment). Continuous EEG monitoring data
from ≥2 hours before to ≥48 hours after study drug administration (SDA) were analyzed
for seizures.
Results
Subjects were randomized to treatment (n = 27) and control (n = 16) groups.
Pharmacokinetics were highly variable among subjects and altered by hypothermia. The
only statistically significant adverse event was diuresis in treated subjects (48% vs
13%, P = .02). One treated (4%) and 3 control subjects died (19%,
P = .14). Among survivors, 2 of 26 treated subjects (8%) and 0 of 13
control subjects had hearing impairment, as did 1 nonrandomized subject. Total seizure
burden varied widely, with much higher seizure burden in treatment vs control groups
(median = 3.1 vs 1.2 min/h, P = .006). There was significantly greater
reduction in seizure burden 0 to 4 hours and 2 to 4 hours post-SDA (both
P < .01) compared with 2-hour baseline in treatment vs control
groups with adjustment for seizure burden.
Interpretation
Although definitive proof of efficacy awaits an appropriately powered phase 3 trial,
this randomized, controlled, multicenter trial demonstrated an additional reduction in
seizure burden attributable to bumetanide over phenobarbital without increased serious
adverse effects. Future trials of bumetanide and other drugs should include a control
group and balance seizure severity. ANN NEUROL 2021; 89:327-340.
Commentary
Seizures are a common manifestation of injury or dysfunction in the neonatal brain and are
associated with acute and chronic adverse neurological sequelae. Therefore, finding a safe,
effective treatment for neonatal seizures continues to be a high priority.
The availability of effective medications is limited by both the inherent physiology
of neonatal brain as well as by the lack of adequately powered and designed clinical trials.
We find ourselves in a situation not unlike that of several decades ago, with phenobarbital
still considered to be the first and best - though not ideal - medicine choice for neonatal seizures.Bumetanide (BUM) has been touted as a drug with antiseizure effects that might fill the
role of a mechanism-based treatment for neonatal seizures.
BUM is a loop diuretic, already being used in neonates, that also inhibits the
chloride co-transporter NKCC1, present on many cells, including neurons. NKCC1 imports
chloride ions (Cl
) into neonatal neurons, keeping the intracellular Cl
concentration high. This unique Cl
distribution accounts, at least in part, for the observation that at early stages of
brain development (up to early post-term), GABA (γ-amino-butyric acid) exerts a depolarizing
rather than hyperpolarizing effect on many neurons.[4,5] Thus in the developing brain, when GABA-A
receptors are activated, Cl
exits the neuron down its concentration gradient, depolarizing the neuron, favoring
neuronal hyperexcitability and increased seizure propensity. As an NKCC1 antagonist, BUM has
been hypothesized to counteract intracellular Cl
accumulation and thereby reduce cellular excitability. Some animal models attest to
the age-related efficacy of BUM against neonatal seizures.The first multicenter, randomized, double-blind clinical trial of BUM for the treatment of
neonatal seizures was published recently.
The results of this pilot study have been long awaited for several reasons.First, the options for effective treatment of neonatal seizures remain extremely limited
and the poor efficacy of current treatments has plagued neonatologists and neonatal
neurologists for years. The seminal 1999 study by Painter and colleagues,
has remained the main source of data with regard to antiseizure medication (ASM)
choice for neonatal seizures. In that study, not quite half (∼45%) of neonatal seizures were
suppressed by phenobarbital or phenytoin; when the first of those drugs didn’t work,
addition of the other ASM resulted in seizure control in another 15% of infants. These data
indicate that seizures in ∼40% of neonates are not controlled, even with dual therapy.Second, past trials of BUM have yielded disappointing results. For example, in the NEonatal
seizure treatment with Medication Off-patent (NEMO) trial, 14 neonates with PHB-resistant
seizures received various doses of BUM. The study was terminated when concerns about
ototoxicity arose in 3 of 11 surviving patients (all also received aminoglycosides,
contributing to potential ototoxicity); though efficacy was not a primary study aim,
investigators concluded no significant benefit of BUM for seizure control.
However, some authorities have opined that this study was terminated prematurely
; more than one-third of infants did not have seizures during the baseline period and
when only neonates with seizures were analyzed, BUM did appear to reduce seizure burden.Third, the possibility that a newer generation ASM with a completely different mechanism of
action (eg, levetiracetam, LEV) might be effective for neonatal seizures was put to rest by
the recent study of Sharpe et al.
This randomized, blinded, multicenter, controlled phase 2b trial compared PHB and LEV
for neonatal seizures of any cause. PHB controlled 80% of neonatal seizures whereas LEV
benefited only 28%.The study by Soul et al
adds considerable important new information. This randomized, double-blind,
multicenter trial was performed on neonates who already had established PHB-resistant
electrographic seizures of any etiology. The infants were then randomized to additional PHB
plus placebo (control group) vs additional PHB plus various doses of BUM (.1, .2, or
.3 mg/kg). This add-on study design allowed comparison of PHB monotherapy (control group)
directly with BUM exposure. Continuous electroencephalographic (cEEG) monitoring was used
for seizure verification at baseline and during treatment. The investigators enrolled 16
neonates in the PHB plus placebo arm and 27 infants in the PHB plus BUM arm. The primary
outcome measure was the pharmacokinetics and safety of BUM as add-on therapy to treat
neonatal seizures, while the “exploratory endpoint” was the effect of dose and drug exposure
on seizure burden. Seizure burden was defined as the minutes of seizure per hour of cEEG
recording. Baseline cEEG was recorded for 2 hours prior to study dose administration, then
for an additional 48 or more hours.Study results are complicated, partly because BUM-randomized patients had a higher baseline
seizure burden (by chance), prior to drug administration. On the other hand, this situation
might be considered fortuitous, because any beneficial effect of BUM would then be even
stronger evidence for its efficacy. Neonates in both arms of the study had similar
demographics and side effect profiles, except that BUM-exposed babies had more diuresis, as
expected. Though seizure burden was quite variable in both arms, the seizure burden both 0
to 4 hours after BUM exposure and 2 to 4 hours after BUM exposure, was decreased
significantly in BUM-exposed babies, and the reduction of seizure burden was dose related.
In regard to safety and pharmacokinetic issues, the primary endpoint, there was no excess
hearing impairment attributed to BUM (only 2/26 survivors developed hearing loss and both
received concurrent aminoglycosides).It is important to recognize that the notion that neonatal seizures can be ameliorated by
blocking the Cl
importing action of NCKK1 has undergone considerable revision and experimental
analysis. The relatively simple idea that GABA is depolarizing early in development and
later becomes hyperpolarizing, due to the time-dependent expression of the various Cl
co-transporters, is just that–too simple, for many reasons. First, NKCC1 may actually
rise until adulthood, rather than peak perinatally and then decline as the expression of the Cl
exporter, KCC2, increases. Second, these transporters may not be the sole or even
primary determinants of intracellular chloride concentration; the distribution and
localization of impermeant anions inside and outside the cell may play a critical role in
setting Cl
homeostasis and thus the direction of the GABA response.
Third, the expression of NKCC1 is widespread and off-target effects of BUM could be rampant.The most important results of this pilot study are that PHB plus BUM had a significant
benefit over PHB monotherapy for seizure burden reduction in newborns with quite varied
seizure etiologies, and without significant adverse effects. Not surprisingly, many
questions remain unanswered, requiring studies with a higher number of participants
necessary to address these. Future studies will need to balance the severity of group
randomization such that a similar seizure burden is present prior to drug exposure. It
remains unclear whether BUM can be used as a first-line ASM for neonatal seizures based on
the inconclusive (and overall, somewhat underwhelming) human and animal data, but this is unlikely.
Seizure responsiveness to BUM (and other agents) may well depend on the seizure
etiology, timing of administration, frequency and severity of prior seizures, and many other
factors. Nevertheless, there remains theoretical support for BUM as a mechanistically
appropriate medication for neonatal seizures. Clearly, there are many other specific
physiological features of the neonatal brain that could also be targeted to decrease
excitability and thus improve seizure burden. Such efforts are well worth the effort, as
neonatal seizures are strongly correlated with future neurologic dysfunction and subsequent
epilepsy.
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Authors: M J Painter; M S Scher; A D Stein; S Armatti; Z Wang; J C Gardiner; N Paneth; B Minnigh; J Alvin Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 1999-08-12 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Volodymyr I Dzhala; Delia M Talos; Dan A Sdrulla; Audrey C Brumback; Gregory C Mathews; Timothy A Benke; Eric Delpire; Frances E Jensen; Kevin J Staley Journal: Nat Med Date: 2005-10-09 Impact factor: 53.440
Authors: Ronit M Pressler; Geraldine B Boylan; Neil Marlow; Mats Blennow; Catherine Chiron; J Helen Cross; Linda S de Vries; Boubou Hallberg; Lena Hellström-Westas; Vincent Jullien; Vicki Livingstone; Barry Mangum; Brendan Murphy; Deirdre Murray; Gerard Pons; Janet Rennie; Renate Swarte; Mona C Toet; Sampsa Vanhatalo; Sarah Zohar Journal: Lancet Neurol Date: 2015-03-10 Impact factor: 44.182
Authors: Janet S Soul; Ann M Bergin; Christian Stopp; Breda Hayes; Avantika Singh; Carmen R Fortuno; Deirdre O'Reilly; Kalpathy Krishnamoorthy; Frances E Jensen; Valerie Rofeberg; Min Dong; Alexander A Vinks; David Wypij; Kevin J Staley Journal: Ann Neurol Date: 2020-12-03 Impact factor: 10.422