Department of Pharmacy Practice, School of Pharmacy, University of Kansas, Kansas City, KS, USA.
Ann Pharmacother. 2011 Nov;45(11):1406-15. doi: 10.1345/aph.1Q349. Epub 2011 Oct 25.
To systematically review the literature on generic antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), evaluate the efficacy and safety of generic AED substitution, and perform pharmacokinetic (PK) analysis using the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) scheme to classify evidence.
PubMed and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature searches from January 1, 1980, to October 15, 2010, were performed using the search terms anticonvulsant, antiepileptic drug, carbamazepine, divalproex, ethosuximide, gabapentin, lamotrigine, levetiracetam, oxcarbazepine, pheno-barbital, phenytoin, primidone, topiramate, valproate, valproic acid, and zonisamide; bioavailability, bioequivalence, bioequivalency, bioequivalent, and substitution; and generic.
Retrospective and prospective controlled studies of generic substitution of AEDs were included in the review. Non-English-language articles and uncontrolled clinical studies were excluded. Published articles were categorized using the AAN criteria for systematic reviews.
We identified 156 articles. Of these, 20 met our inclusion criteria; 7 were retrospective studies, 6 were prospective studies in patients with epilepsy, and 7 were prospective studies in healthy subjects. All articles were rated Class I to Class III, using AAN criteria. The retrospective studies were categorized as Class III and showed a significant relationship between generic substitution and increased use of health care resources because of seizures or AED toxicity. Prospective studies were categorized as Class I, II, and III. Prospective studies in patients showed no differences between brand and generic drugs in PK parameters of bioequivalence. Three prospective studies in healthy subjects reported significant differences in maximum drug concentrations. Comparison of brand and generic drugs revealed no significant difference in seizure frequency; however, some prospective studies showed significant differences in PK parameters, primarily those not used for bioequivalence determinations.
There is inconsistency between retrospective and prospective studies of generic AED substitution. The highest levels of evidence indicate that there should not be a problem with generic substitution, although some patients are more prone to problems with the generic products. Some evidence suggests that switches between multiple generic AED products in certain individuals may be problematic.
系统地回顾有关通用抗癫痫药物(AED)的文献,评估通用 AED 替代的疗效和安全性,并使用美国神经病学学会(AAN)方案进行药代动力学(PK)分析,对证据进行分类。
使用“抗惊厥药”、“抗癫痫药”、“卡马西平”、“丙戊酸钠”、“乙琥胺”、“加巴喷丁”、“拉莫三嗪”、“左乙拉西坦”、“奥卡西平”、“苯巴比妥”、“苯妥英钠”、“苯琥胺”、“托吡酯”、“丙戊酸”和“唑尼沙胺”等检索词,对 1980 年 1 月 1 日至 2010 年 10 月 15 日期间的 PubMed 和 Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature 进行了检索。
本综述纳入了关于 AED 通用替代的回顾性和前瞻性对照研究。排除了非英语文章和非对照临床研究。已发表的文章根据 AAN 系统评价标准进行了分类。
我们共确定了 156 篇文章。其中,有 20 篇符合纳入标准;7 篇为回顾性研究,6 篇为癫痫患者的前瞻性研究,7 篇为健康受试者的前瞻性研究。所有文章均使用 AAN 标准评定为 I 类至 III 类。回顾性研究被归类为 III 类,并显示通用替代与因癫痫发作或 AED 毒性而增加的医疗资源使用之间存在显著关系。前瞻性研究被归类为 I 类、II 类和 III 类。在患者中进行的前瞻性研究显示,品牌药物和仿制药在生物等效性的 PK 参数方面没有差异。3 项在健康受试者中进行的前瞻性研究报告了药物最大浓度方面的显著差异。比较品牌药物和仿制药,发现癫痫发作频率无显著差异;然而,一些前瞻性研究显示 PK 参数存在显著差异,主要是那些不用于生物等效性确定的参数。
通用 AED 替代的回顾性和前瞻性研究之间存在不一致。最高级别的证据表明,通用替代不应存在问题,尽管有些患者更容易出现通用产品的问题。一些证据表明,在某些个体中,在多种通用 AED 产品之间进行转换可能存在问题。