Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Messina, Messina, Italy.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 2013 Aug;52(8):627-45. doi: 10.1007/s40262-013-0067-4.
Epilepsies occur across the entire age range, and their incidence peaks in the first years of life and in the elderly. Therefore, antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are commonly used at the extremes of age. Rational prescribing in these age groups requires not only an understanding of the drugs' pharmacodynamic properties, but also careful consideration of potential age-related changes in their pharmacokinetic profile. The present article, which updates a review published in 2006 in this journal, focuses on recent findings on the pharmacokinetics of new-generation AEDs in neonates, infants, children, and the elderly. Significant new information on the pharmacokinetics of new AEDs in the perinatal period has been acquired, particularly for lamotrigine and levetiracetam. As a result of slow maturation of the enzymes involved in glucuronide conjugation, lamotrigine elimination occurs at a particularly slow rate in neonates, and becomes gradually more efficient during the first months of life. In the case of levetiracetam, elimination occurs primarily by renal excretion and is also slow at birth, but drug clearance increases rapidly thereafter and can even double within 1 week. In general, infants older than 2-3 months and children show higher drug clearance (normalized for body weight) than adults. This pattern was confirmed in recent studies that investigated the pediatric pharmacokinetics of several new AEDs, including levetiracetam, rufinamide, stiripentol, and eslicarbazepine acetate. At the other extreme of age, in the elderly, drug clearance is generally reduced compared with younger adults because of less efficient drug-metabolizing activity, decreased renal function, or both. This general pattern, described previously for several AEDs, was confirmed in recent studies on the effect of old age on the clearance of felbamate, levetiracetam, pregabalin, lacosamide, and retigabine. For those drugs which are predominantly eliminated by renal excretion, aging-related pharmacokinetic changes could be predicted by measuring creatinine clearance (CLCR). Overall, most recent findings confirm that age is a major factor influencing the pharmacokinetic profile of AEDs. However, pharmacokinetic variability at any age can be considerable, and the importance of other factors should not be disregarded. These include genetic factors, co-morbidities, and drug interactions, particularly those caused by concomitantly administered AEDs which induce or inhibit drug-metabolizing enzymes.
癫痫发生在整个年龄段,其发病率在生命的最初几年和老年时达到高峰。因此,抗癫痫药物(AEDs)在年龄较大和较小的人群中都有广泛应用。在这些年龄组中合理用药不仅需要了解药物的药效学特性,还需要仔细考虑其药代动力学特征可能因年龄相关的变化。本文更新了 2006 年在本杂志发表的一篇综述,重点介绍了新生儿、婴儿、儿童和老年人中新一代 AED 药代动力学的最新发现。新的信息主要集中在围产期新 AED 的药代动力学,尤其是拉莫三嗪和左乙拉西坦。由于与葡萄糖醛酸结合相关的酶成熟缓慢,拉莫三嗪在新生儿体内的消除速度特别慢,在生命的头几个月内逐渐变得更有效。对于左乙拉西坦,消除主要通过肾脏排泄,出生时也很慢,但此后药物清除率迅速增加,甚至在 1 周内增加一倍。一般来说,2-3 个月以上的婴儿和儿童的药物清除率(按体重标准化)高于成人。这一模式在最近的几项研究中得到了证实,这些研究调查了几种新的 AEDs(包括左乙拉西坦、鲁非酰胺、司替戊醇和依佐加滨)在儿科人群中的药代动力学。在年龄的另一个极端,老年人与年轻成年人相比,药物清除率通常较低,原因是药物代谢活性降低、肾功能下降或两者兼有。这种普遍模式以前曾在几种 AED 中描述过,最近关于老年对非氨酯、左乙拉西坦、普瑞巴林、拉科酰胺和瑞替加滨清除率影响的研究也证实了这一点。对于那些主要通过肾脏排泄消除的药物,与年龄相关的药代动力学变化可以通过测量肌酐清除率(CLCR)来预测。总的来说,最近的发现证实年龄是影响 AED 药代动力学特征的主要因素。然而,任何年龄的药代动力学变异性都可能很大,不应忽视其他因素的重要性。这些因素包括遗传因素、合并症和药物相互作用,特别是由同时给予的诱导或抑制药物代谢酶的 AED 引起的药物相互作用。