| Literature DB >> 35067230 |
Katharina M Busl1, Lawrence J Hirsch2, Carolina B Maciel3,4,5,6, Fernanda J P Teixeira1, Katie J Dickinson1, Jessica C Spana1, Lisa H Merck1,7, Alejandro A Rabinstein8, Robert Sergott9, Guogen Shan10, Guanhong Miao10, Charles A Peloquin11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nearly one in three unconscious cardiac arrest survivors experience post-anoxic status epilepticus (PASE). Historically, PASE has been deemed untreatable resulting in its exclusion from status epilepticus clinical trials. However, emerging reports of survivors achieving functional independence following early and aggressive treatment of PASE challenged this widespread therapeutic nihilism. In the absence of proven therapies specific to PASE, standard of care treatment leans on general management strategies for status epilepticus. Vigabatrin-an approved therapy for refractory focal-onset seizures in adults-inhibits the enzyme responsible for GABA catabolism, increases brain GABA levels and may act synergistically with anesthetic agents to abort seizures. Our central hypothesis is that early inhibition of GABA breakdown is possible in the post-cardiac arrest period and may be an effective adjunctive treatment in PASE.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Cardiac arrest; GABA; Heart arrest; Post-anoxic status epilepticus; Status epilepticus; Vigabatrin
Year: 2022 PMID: 35067230 PMCID: PMC8785535 DOI: 10.1186/s42466-022-00168-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Pract ISSN: 2524-3489
Fig. 1Vigabatrin mechanism in the inhibitory synapse
Eligibility criteria
| Eligibility criteria | |
|---|---|
| 1. 18–80 years of age | The target study population is adults, hence ≥ 18 years. Individuals > 80 years have a lower likelihood of successfully tolerating aggressive treatment for PASE, including escalating doses of intravenous anesthetic infusions, and are subjected to high rates of withdrawal of life sustaining therapy in the early post-cardiac arrest period. The upper age limit of 80 years has been used in other cardiac arrest trials |
| 2. Non-traumatic cardiac arrest of any rhythm, etiology and location of occurrence | PASE may occur following cardiac arrest of any type, regardless of the location of its occurrence (out-of hospital vs in-hospital) or the type of non-perfusing rhythm. Traumatic cardiac arrests have different organ injury and clinical trajectories than non-traumatic cardiac arrests |
| 3. Requiring anesthetic infusion for any indication | To standardize starting point of anesthetic infusions prior to initiation of therapeutic algorithm for PASE |
| 4. Arterial access for frequent blood sampling | Facilitate timely and standardized collection of blood sampling for pharmacokinetic analyses |
| 5. Established enteral access within 48 h of PASE onset | There is currently no parenteral form of vigabatrin, thus, enteral access is a prerequisite for participation |
| 1. Prior history of generalized epilepsy | Vigabatrin may exacerbate certain types of primary epilepsy such as primary generalized epilepsy |
| 2. Gastrointestinal surgery within the last 21 days | Avoid confounding effect that could affect absorption of study drug |
| 3. Pregnancy | There is currently no controlled data verifying the safety of vigabatrin dosing in pregnant women, so they are excluded from this study |
| 4. PASE onset preceding initiation of EEG monitoring | If PASE onset occurred prior to the initiation of monitoring, the start time for the onset of PASE cannot be determined |
Fig. 2University of Florida neurocritical care guidelines for post-anoxic status epilepticus