Powell Graham, Saunders Matthew, Marson Anthony G
The Walton Centre for Neurology & Neurosurgery NHS Foundation Trust, Lower Lane, Fazakerley, Liverpool, UK, L9 7LJ.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Feb 3(2):CD007124. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007124.pub3.
Epilepsy is defined as the tendency to spontaneous, excessive neuronal discharge manifesting as seizures. It is a common disorder with an incidence of 50 per 100,000 per year and a prevalence of 0.5% to 1% (Hauser 1993) in the developed world.Carbamazepine (CBZ) is a widely used antiepileptic drug that is associated with a number of troublesome adverse events including dizziness, double vision and unsteadiness. These often occur during peaks in plasma concentration. The occurrence of such adverse events may limit the daily dose that can be tolerated and reduce the chances of seizure control for patients requiring higher doses (Vojvodic 2002). A controlled-release formulation of carbamazepine delivers the same dose over a longer period of time when compared to a standard formulation, thereby reducing post-dose peaks and potentially reducing adverse events associated with peak plasma levels.
To determine the efficacy of immediate-release CBZ (IR CBZ) versus controlled-release CBZ (CR CBZ) in patients diagnosed with epilepsy. The following hypotheses were tested.(1) For newly diagnosed patients commencing CBZ, how do immediate-release and controlled-release formulations compare for efficacy and tolerability?(2) For patients on established treatment with immediate-release CBZ but experiencing unacceptable adverse events, what is the effect on seizure control and tolerability of a switch to a controlled-release formulation versus remaining on the immediate-release formulation?
We searched the Cochrane Epilepsy Group Specialised Register (5 September 2013), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (Issue 8, 2013) in The Cochrane Library and MEDLINE (1946 to 5 September 2013).
Randomised controlled trials comparing IR CBZ to CR CBZ in patients commencing monotherapy and patients presently treated with IR CBZ but experiencing unacceptable adverse events.Primary outcome measures include seizure frequency, incidence of adverse events, proportion with treatment failure and quality of life measures.
The methodological quality of each study was assessed with respect to study design, type of control, method and the concealment of allocation, blinding and completeness of follow up, and the presence of blinding for assessment of non-fatal outcomes. We did not make use of an overall quality score.Two review authors (GP, MS) independently extracted the data and recorded relevant information on a standardised data extraction form. Results were assessed for inclusion.The heterogeneity of the included trials resulted in only a narrative, descriptive analysis being possible for both the categorical and time-to-event data.
Ten trials fulfilled the criteria for inclusion in this review. One trial included patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy and nine included patients on treatment with IR CBZ.Eight trials reported heterogeneous measures of seizure frequency with conflicting results. A statistically significant difference was observed in only one trial, with patients prescribed CR CBZ experiencing fewer seizures than patients prescribed IR CBZ.Nine trials reported measures of adverse events. There was a trend in favour of CR CBZ with four trials reporting a statistically significant reduction in adverse events compared to IR CBZ. A further two trials reported fewer adverse events with CR CBZ but the reduction was not statistically significant. One trial found no difference, with a further trial reporting increased adverse events in the CR CBZ group although not statistically significant.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: At present, data from trials do not confirm or refute an advantage for CR CBZ over IR CBZ for seizure frequency or adverse events in patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy.For trials involving epilepsy patients already prescribed IR CBZ, no conclusions can be drawn concerning the superiority of CR CBZ with respect to seizure frequency.There is a trend for CR CBZ to be associated with fewer adverse events when compared to IR CBZ. A change to CR CBZ may therefore be a worthwhile strategy in patients with acceptable seizure control on IR CBZ but experiencing unacceptable adverse events. The included trials were of small size, poor methodological quality and possessed a high risk of bias, limiting the validity of this conclusion.Randomised controlled trials comparing CR CBZ to IR CBZ and using clinically relevant outcomes are required to inform the choice of CBZ preparation for patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy.
癫痫的定义为具有自发、过度神经元放电倾向,表现为癫痫发作。它是一种常见疾病,在发达国家年发病率为每10万人中有50例,患病率为0.5%至1%(豪泽,1993年)。卡马西平(CBZ)是一种广泛使用的抗癫痫药物,与许多令人烦恼的不良事件有关,包括头晕、复视和步态不稳。这些不良事件常在血药浓度峰值时出现。此类不良事件的发生可能会限制患者可耐受的每日剂量,并降低需要更高剂量的患者控制癫痫发作的机会(沃伊沃迪奇,2002年)。与标准制剂相比,卡马西平控释制剂能在更长时间内释放相同剂量,从而降低给药后血药浓度峰值,并有可能减少与血药浓度峰值相关的不良事件。
确定速释型卡马西平(IR CBZ)与控释型卡马西平(CR CBZ)对癫痫患者的疗效。对以下假设进行了检验。(1)对于新诊断开始服用卡马西平的患者,速释制剂和控释制剂在疗效和耐受性方面如何比较?(2)对于正在接受速释型卡马西平治疗但出现不可接受的不良事件的患者,改用控释制剂与继续使用速释制剂相比,对癫痫控制和耐受性有何影响?
我们检索了Cochrane癫痫专业组专门注册库(2013年9月5日)、Cochrane系统评价数据库中的Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(2013年第8期)以及MEDLINE(1946年至2013年9月5日)。
比较IR CBZ与CR CBZ用于开始单药治疗的患者以及目前接受IR CBZ治疗但出现不可接受的不良事件的患者的随机对照试验。主要结局指标包括癫痫发作频率、不良事件发生率、治疗失败比例和生活质量指标。
根据研究设计、对照类型、分配方法及隐藏、盲法和随访完整性,以及非致命结局评估的盲法情况,对每项研究的方法学质量进行评估。我们未使用总体质量评分。两位综述作者(GP、MS)独立提取数据,并在标准化数据提取表上记录相关信息。对结果进行纳入评估。纳入试验的异质性导致对于分类数据和事件发生时间数据只能进行叙述性、描述性分析。
10项试验符合本综述的纳入标准。1项试验纳入新诊断的癫痫患者,9项试验纳入接受IR CBZ治疗的患者。8项试验报告了癫痫发作频率的异质性测量结果,结果相互矛盾。仅在1项试验中观察到统计学显著差异,服用CR CBZ的患者癫痫发作次数少于服用IR CBZ的患者。9项试验报告了不良事件测量结果。有支持CR CBZ的趋势,4项试验报告与IR CBZ相比,CR CBZ的不良事件有统计学显著减少。另外2项试验报告CR CBZ的不良事件较少,但减少无统计学显著性。1项试验未发现差异,另一项试验报告CR CBZ组不良事件增加,尽管无统计学显著性。
目前,试验数据未证实或反驳CR CBZ在新诊断癫痫患者的癫痫发作频率或不良事件方面优于IR CBZ。对于涉及已服用IR CBZ的癫痫患者的试验,无法得出CR CBZ在癫痫发作频率方面优越性的结论。与IR CBZ相比,CR CBZ有不良事件较少的趋势。因此,对于在IR CBZ治疗下癫痫控制可接受但出现不可接受的不良事件的患者,改用CR CBZ可能是一个值得的策略。纳入试验规模小、方法学质量差且存在高偏倚风险,限制了该结论的有效性。需要进行比较CR CBZ与IR CBZ并使用临床相关结局的随机对照试验,为新诊断癫痫患者选择卡马西平制剂提供依据。