Löscher Wolfgang
Department of Pharmacology, Toxicology, and Pharmacy, School of Veterinary Medicine, Bünteweg 17, Hannover, Germany.
Epilepsy Res. 2002 Jun;50(1-2):105-23. doi: 10.1016/s0920-1211(02)00073-6.
Control of epilepsy has primarily focused on suppressing seizure activity by antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) after epilepsy has developed. AEDs have greatly improved the lives of people with epilepsy. However, the belief that AEDs, in addition to suppressing seizures, alter the underlying epileptogenic process and, in doing so, the course of the disease and its prognosis, is not supported by the current clinical and experimental data. An intriguing possibility is to control acquired epilepsy by preventing epileptogenesis, the process by which the brain becomes epileptic. A number of AEDs have been evaluated in clinical trials to test whether they prevent epileptogenesis in humans, but to date no drug has been shown to be effective in such trials. Thus, there is a pressing need for drugs that are truly antiepileptogenic to either prevent epilepsy or alter its natural course. For this purpose, animal models of epilepsy are an important prerequisite. There are various animal models with chronic brain dysfunctions thought to reflect the processes underlying human epilepsy. Such chronic models of epilepsy include the kindling model of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), post-status models of TLE in which epilepsy develops after a sustained status epilepticus, and genetic models of different types of epilepsy. Currently, the kindling model and post-status models, such as the pilocarpine or kainate models, are the most widely used models for studies on epileptogenic processes and on drug targets by which epilepsy can be prevented or modified. Furthermore, the seizures in these models can be used for testing of antiepileptic drug effects. A comparison of the pharmacology of chronic models with models of acute (reactive or provoked) seizures in previously healthy (non-epileptic) animals, such as the maximal electroshock seizure test, demonstrates that drug testing in chronic models of epilepsy yields data which are more predictive of clinical efficacy and adverse effects, so that chronic models should be used relatively early in drug development to minimize false positives. Interestingly, the pharmacology of elicited kindled seizures in fully kindled rats and spontaneous recurrent seizures in post-status models is remarkably similar. However, when these models are used for studying the antiepileptogenic effects of drugs, marked differences between models exist, indicating that the processes underlying epileptogenesis differ among models, even among different post-status models of TLE. A problem for clinical validation of TLE models is the lack of an AED, which effectively prevents epilepsy in humans. Thus, at present, it is not possible to judge which chronic model is best suited for developing new strategies in the search for antiepileptogenic and disease-modifying drugs, but rather a battery of models should be used to avoid false negative or positive predictions.
癫痫的控制主要集中在癫痫发作后通过抗癫痫药物(AEDs)抑制发作活动。AEDs极大地改善了癫痫患者的生活。然而,目前的临床和实验数据并不支持这样的观点,即AEDs除了抑制癫痫发作外,还能改变潜在的致痫过程,进而改变疾病的进程及其预后。一个引人关注的可能性是通过预防癫痫发生来控制后天性癫痫,癫痫发生是指大脑变成癫痫状态的过程。一些AEDs已在临床试验中进行评估,以测试它们是否能预防人类的癫痫发生,但迄今为止,尚无药物在这类试验中显示有效。因此,迫切需要真正具有抗癫痫发生作用的药物来预防癫痫或改变其自然病程。为此,癫痫动物模型是一个重要的先决条件。有各种被认为反映人类癫痫潜在过程的慢性脑功能障碍动物模型。这类慢性癫痫模型包括颞叶癫痫(TLE)的点燃模型、癫痫持续状态后发生癫痫的TLE后癫痫持续状态模型以及不同类型癫痫的遗传模型。目前,点燃模型和后癫痫持续状态模型,如毛果芸香碱或海藻酸模型,是用于研究致痫过程以及可预防或改变癫痫的药物靶点的最广泛使用的模型。此外,这些模型中的癫痫发作可用于测试抗癫痫药物的效果。将慢性模型的药理学与先前健康(非癫痫)动物的急性(反应性或诱发性)癫痫发作模型(如最大电休克惊厥试验)进行比较表明,在慢性癫痫模型中进行药物测试所获得的数据对临床疗效和不良反应的预测性更强,因此在药物研发过程中应相对较早地使用慢性模型,以尽量减少假阳性结果。有趣的是,在完全点燃的大鼠中诱发的点燃性癫痫发作的药理学与后癫痫持续状态模型中的自发性反复癫痫发作的药理学非常相似。然而,当使用这些模型研究药物的抗癫痫发生作用时,模型之间存在显著差异,这表明致痫过程在不同模型之间存在差异,甚至在不同的TLE后癫痫持续状态模型之间也存在差异。TLE模型临床验证的一个问题是缺乏一种能有效预防人类癫痫的AED。因此,目前无法判断哪种慢性模型最适合用于开发寻找抗癫痫发生和疾病修饰药物的新策略,而应使用一系列模型以避免假阴性或假阳性预测。