Department of Neurology (Division of Neurocritical Care), Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, Campus Box 8111, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, Campus Box 8057, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA.
Neurocrit Care. 2018 Apr;28(2):169-174. doi: 10.1007/s12028-017-0440-5.
Seizures occur in 10-20% of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), predominantly in the acute phase. However, anticonvulsant prophylaxis remains controversial, with studies suggesting a brief course may be adequate and longer exposure may be associated with worse outcomes. Nonetheless, in the absence of controlled trials to inform practice, patients continue to receive variable chemoprophylaxis. The objective of this study was to compare brief versus extended seizure prophylaxis after aneurysmal SAH.
We performed a prospective, single-center, randomized, open-label trial of a brief (3-day) course of levetiracetam (LEV) versus extended treatment (until hospital discharge). The primary outcome was in-hospital seizure. Secondary outcomes included drug discontinuation and functional outcome.
Eighty-four SAH patients had been randomized when the trial was terminated due to slow enrollment. In-hospital seizures occurred in three (9%) of 35 in the brief LEV group versus one (2%) of 49 in the extended group (p = 0.2). Ten (20%) of the extended group discontinued LEV prematurely, primarily due to sedation. Four of five seizures (including one pre-randomization) occurred in patients with early brain injury (EBI) on computed tomography (CT) scans (adjusted OR 12.5, 95% CI 1.2-122, p = 0.03). Good functional outcome (mRS 0-2) was more likely in the brief LEV group (83 vs. 61%, p = 0.04).
This study was underpowered to demonstrate superiority of extended LEV for seizure prophylaxis, although a trend to benefit was seen. Seizures primarily occurred in those with radiographic EBI, suggesting targeted prophylaxis may be preferable. Larger trials are required to evaluate optimal chemoprophylaxis in SAH, especially in light of worse outcomes in those receiving extended treatment.
蛛网膜下腔出血(SAH)患者中有 10-20%发生癫痫发作,主要发生在急性期。然而,抗癫痫药物预防仍存在争议,研究表明短暂疗程可能足够,而更长时间的暴露可能与更差的结局相关。尽管如此,由于缺乏控制试验来指导实践,患者仍继续接受不同的化学预防。本研究旨在比较 SAH 后短暂与延长癫痫预防。
我们进行了一项前瞻性、单中心、随机、开放标签的研究,比较了左乙拉西坦(LEV)的短程(3 天)与长程治疗(直至出院)。主要结局是住院期间的癫痫发作。次要结局包括药物停药和功能结局。
试验因入组缓慢而终止时,84 例 SAH 患者被随机分配。在短暂 LEV 组中,35 例中有 3 例(9%)发生院内癫痫发作,而在延长组中,49 例中有 1 例(2%)发生(p=0.2)。10 例(20%)延长组患者因镇静作用过早停止使用 LEV。5 例癫痫发作中有 4 例(包括 1 例在随机分组前)发生在 CT 扫描有早期脑损伤(EBI)的患者中(校正比值比 12.5,95%CI 1.2-122,p=0.03)。在短暂 LEV 组中,良好的功能结局(mRS 0-2)更常见(83% vs. 61%,p=0.04)。
本研究在证明延长 LEV 用于癫痫预防的优越性方面能力不足,尽管有获益趋势。癫痫发作主要发生在有影像学 EBI 的患者中,这表明靶向预防可能更可取。需要更大规模的试验来评估 SAH 的最佳化学预防,特别是在接受延长治疗的患者结局更差的情况下。