Literature DB >> 9203067

Optimizing the indication of vigabatrin in children with refractory epilepsy.

A Lortie1, C Chiron, C Dumas, J P Mumford, O Dulac.   

Abstract

This review was conducted to evaluate the long-term prognosis of children responding to vigabatrin by examining the incidence of increased seizure frequency, loss of efficacy, and appearance of new seizures in a cohort of 196 children (mean age, 68.2 months; range, 2 months to 19 years) with drug-resistant epilepsy, who had received vigabatrin as add-on treatment in clinical trials. The results indicate that an increase in seizure frequency was uncommon, occurring in only 10% of children with highly drug-resistant epilepsy and that it usually appears shortly after the initiation of treatment. It was clearly not dose-dependent and most often occurred in patients with nonprogressive myoclonic epilepsy. No specific seizure type was specially involved and usually the problem reversed on discontinuing vigabatrin. Loss of efficacy was also uncommon (12% of patients), and again no specific seizure type was found to be associated. Epilepsy syndrome does seem to be a better predictor of loss of efficacy because it occurred most often in symptomatic generalized epilepsies and cryptogenic infantile spasms. A total of 21 patients (11%) developed genuinely new types of seizures. Fifteen of these patients developed new partial seizures that had little impact on the patients' overall clinical improvement. The new partial seizures were better tolerated than the initial seizure type which in most cases had disappeared. Approximately 3% of patients experienced new generalized seizures that aggravated their initial condition. These occurred most often in patients with nonprogressive myoclonic epilepsy; therefore vigabatrin should be used with particular caution in such patients.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9203067     DOI: 10.1177/088307389701200407

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Child Neurol        ISSN: 0883-0738            Impact factor:   1.987


  5 in total

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Authors:  Greg L Plosker
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Review 2.  The safety and tolerability of newer antiepileptic drugs in children and adolescents.

Authors:  Dean P Sarco; Blaise F D Bourgeois
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2010-05       Impact factor: 5.749

3.  Effects of blocking GABA degradation on corticotropin-releasing hormone gene expression in selected brain regions.

Authors:  V Tran; C G Hatalski; X X Yan; T Z Baram
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  1999-09       Impact factor: 5.864

4.  Visual field loss in patients with refractory partial epilepsy treated with vigabatrin: final results from an open-label, observational, multicentre study.

Authors:  John M Wild; Catherine Chiron; Hyosook Ahn; Michel Baulac; Joseph Bursztyn; Enrico Gandolfo; Ivan Goldberg; Francisco Javier Goñi; Florence Mercier; Jean-Philippe Nordmann; Avinoam B Safran; Ulrich Schiefer; Emilio Perucca
Journal:  CNS Drugs       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 5.749

5.  Treatment of epilepsy: the GABA-transaminase inhibitor, vigabatrin, induces neuronal plasticity in the mouse retina.

Authors:  Qing-Ping Wang; Firas Jammoul; Agnès Duboc; Jie Gong; Manuel Simonutti; Elisabeth Dubus; Cheryl M Craft; Wen Ye; José A Sahel; Serge Picaud
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 3.386

  5 in total

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