Hearn Leslie, Derry Sheena, Moore R Andrew
Pain Research and Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences (Nuffield Division of Anaesthetics), University of Oxford, Oxford,UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 Feb 15;2012(2):CD009318. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009318.pub2.
Antiepileptic drugs have been used in pain management since the 1960s; some seem to be especially useful for neuropathic pain. Lacosamide is an antiepileptic drug that has recently been investigated for neuropathic pain relief, although it failed to get approval for painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy from either the Food and Drug Administration or the European Medicines Agency.
To evaluate the analgesic efficacy and adverse effects of lacosamide in the management of chronic neuropathic pain or fibromyalgia.
We searched the Cochrane Neuromuscular Disease Group Specialized Register (2011, Issue 4), CENTRAL (2011, Issue 3), MEDLINE (January 2000 to August 2011) and EMBASE (2000 to August 2011) without language restriction, together with reference lists of retrieved papers and reviews.
We included randomised, double-blind studies of eight weeks duration or longer, comparing lacosamide with placebo or another active treatment in chronic neuropathic pain or fibromyalgia.
Two review authors independently extracted data for efficacy and adverse events and examined issues of study quality, including risk of bias assessments. Where possible, we calculated numbers needed to treat to benefit from dichotomous data for effectiveness, adverse events and study withdrawals.
We included six studies; five (1863 participants) in painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN) and one (159 participants) in fibromyalgia. All were placebo-controlled and titrated to a target dose of 200 mg, 400 mg or 600 mg lacosamide daily, given as a divided dose. Study reporting quality was generally good, although the imputation method of last observation carried forward used in analyses of the primary outcomes is known to known to impart major bias where, as here, adverse event withdrawal rates were high. This, together with small numbers of patients and events for most outcomes at most doses meant that most results were of low quality, with moderate quality evidence available for some efficacy outcomes for 400 mg lacosamide.There were too few data for analysis of the 200 mg dose for painful diabetic neuropathy or any dose for fibromyalgia.In painful diabetic neuropathy, lacosamide 400 mg provided statistically increased rates of achievement of "moderate" and "substantial" benefit (at least 30% and at least 50% reduction from baseline in patient-reported pain respectively) and the patient global impression of change outcome of "much or very much improved". In each case the extra proportion benefiting above placebo was about 10%, yielding numbers needed to treat to benefit compared with placebo of 10 to 12. For lacosamide 600 mg there was no consistent benefit over placebo.There was no significant difference between any dose of lacosamide and placebo for participants experiencing any adverse event or a serious adverse event, but adverse event withdrawals showed a significant dose response. The number needed to treat to harm for adverse event withdrawal was 11 for lacosamide 400 mg and 4 for the 600 mg dose.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Lacosamide has limited efficacy in the treatment of peripheral diabetic neuropathy. Higher doses did not give consistently better efficacy, but were associated with significantly more adverse event withdrawals. Where adverse event withdrawals are high with active treatment compared with placebo and when last observation carried forward imputation is used, as in some of these studies, significant overestimation of treatment efficacy can result. It is likely, therefore, that lacosamide is without any useful benefit in treating neuropathic pain; any positive interpretation of the evidence should be made with caution if at all.
自20世纪60年代以来,抗癫痫药物就被用于疼痛管理;有些药物似乎对神经性疼痛特别有效。拉科酰胺是一种抗癫痫药物,最近已对其缓解神经性疼痛进行了研究,尽管它未获得美国食品药品监督管理局或欧洲药品管理局批准用于治疗疼痛性糖尿病周围神经病变。
评估拉科酰胺治疗慢性神经性疼痛或纤维肌痛的镇痛效果及不良反应。
我们检索了Cochrane神经肌肉疾病组专业注册库(2011年第4期)、Cochrane系统评价数据库(2011年第3期)、MEDLINE(2000年1月至2011年8月)和EMBASE(2000年至2011年8月),检索无语言限制,并查阅了检索到的论文和综述的参考文献列表。
我们纳入了为期8周或更长时间的随机、双盲研究,这些研究比较了拉科酰胺与安慰剂或其他活性治疗药物在慢性神经性疼痛或纤维肌痛中的疗效。
两位综述作者独立提取疗效和不良事件数据,并审查研究质量问题,包括偏倚风险评估。在可能的情况下,我们根据二分法数据计算了从有效性、不良事件和研究撤药中获益所需的治疗人数。
我们纳入了6项研究;5项(1863名参与者)针对疼痛性糖尿病周围神经病变(PDN),1项(159名参与者)针对纤维肌痛。所有研究均为安慰剂对照,并滴定至拉科酰胺每日目标剂量200mg、400mg或600mg,分剂量给药。研究报告质量总体良好,尽管在主要结局分析中使用的末次观察值结转插补方法,在不良事件撤药率较高的情况下,如本研究,已知会产生重大偏倚。这一点,再加上大多数剂量下大多数结局的患者和事件数量较少,意味着大多数结果质量较低,400mg拉科酰胺的一些疗效结局有中等质量的证据。对于疼痛性糖尿病周围神经病变的200mg剂量或纤维肌痛的任何剂量,可供分析的数据太少。在疼痛性糖尿病周围神经病变中,400mg拉科酰胺在统计学上提高了“中度”和“显著”获益(患者报告的疼痛分别较基线降低至少30%和至少50%)的达成率,以及患者总体变化印象结局为“好多了或非常好多了”。在每种情况下,与安慰剂相比额外获益的比例约为10%,与安慰剂相比获益所需的治疗人数为10至12。对于600mg拉科酰胺,与安慰剂相比没有一致的获益。在经历任何不良事件或严重不良事件的参与者中,任何剂量的拉科酰胺与安慰剂之间均无显著差异,但不良事件撤药显示出显著的剂量反应。拉科酰胺400mg因不良事件撤药导致伤害所需的治疗人数为11,600mg剂量为4。
拉科酰胺在治疗周围性糖尿病神经病变方面疗效有限。较高剂量并未带来持续更好的疗效,但与显著更多的不良事件撤药相关。与安慰剂相比,活性治疗的不良事件撤药率较高,且如这些研究中的一些那样使用末次观察值结转插补时,可能会导致对治疗疗效的显著高估。因此,拉科酰胺在治疗神经性疼痛方面可能没有任何有益作用;如果要对证据进行任何积极解读,应谨慎为之。