Nevitt Sarah J, Marson Anthony G, Tudur Smith Catrin
Department of Biostatistics, University of Liverpool, Block F, Waterhouse Building, 1-5 Brownlow Hill, Liverpool, UK, L69 3GL.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Oct 24;10(10):CD001904. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001904.pub4.
This is an updated version of the Cochrane Review previously published in 2016. This review is one in a series of Cochrane Reviews investigating pair-wise monotherapy comparisons.Epilepsy is a common neurological condition in which abnormal electrical discharges from the brain cause recurrent unprovoked seizures. It is believed that with effective drug treatment, up to 70% of individuals with active epilepsy have the potential to become seizure-free and go into long-term remission shortly after starting drug therapy with a single antiepileptic drug in monotherapy.Worldwide, carbamazepine and phenobarbitone are commonly used broad-spectrum antiepileptic drugs, suitable for most epileptic seizure types. Carbamazepine is a current first-line treatment for focal onset seizures, and is used in the USA and Europe. Phenobarbitone is no longer considered a first-line treatment because of concerns over associated adverse events, particularly documented behavioural adverse events in children treated with the drug. However, phenobarbitone is still commonly used in low- and middle-income countries because of its low cost. No consistent differences in efficacy have been found between carbamazepine and phenobarbitone in individual trials; however, the confidence intervals generated by these trials are wide, and therefore, synthesising the data of the individual trials may show differences in efficacy.
To review the time to treatment failure, remission and first seizure with carbamazepine compared with phenobarbitone when used as monotherapy in people with focal onset seizures (simple or complex focal and secondarily generalised), or generalised onset tonic-clonic seizures (with or without other generalised seizure types).
For the latest update, we searched the following databases on 24 May 2018: the Cochrane Register of Studies (CRS Web), which includes Cochrane Epilepsy's Specialized Register and CENTRAL; MEDLINE; the US National Institutes of Health Ongoing Trials Register (ClinicalTrials.gov); and the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP). We handsearched relevant journals and contacted pharmaceutical companies, original trial investigators, and experts in the field.
Randomised controlled trials comparing monotherapy with either carbamazepine or phenobarbitone in children or adults with focal onset seizures or generalised onset tonic-clonic seizures.
This was an individual participant data (IPD), review. Our primary outcome was time to treatment failure. Our secondary outcomes were time to first seizure post-randomisation, time to six-month remission, time to 12-month remission, and incidence of adverse events. We used Cox proportional hazards regression models to obtain trial-specific estimates of hazard ratios (HRs), with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), using the generic inverse variance method to obtain the overall pooled HR and 95% CI.
We included 13 trials in this review and IPD were available for 836 individuals out of 1455 eligible individuals from six trials, 57% of the potential data. For remission outcomes, a HR of less than 1 indicates an advantage for phenobarbitone and for first seizure and treatment failure outcomes a HR of less than 1 indicates an advantage for carbamazepine.Results for the primary outcome of the review were: time to treatment failure for any reason related to treatment (pooled HR adjusted for seizure type for 676 participants: 0.66, 95% CI 0.50 to 0.86, moderate-quality evidence), time to treatment failure due to adverse events (pooled HR adjusted for seizure type for 619 participants: 0.69, 95% CI 0.49 to 0.97, low-quality evidence), time to treatment failure due to lack of efficacy (pooled HR adjusted for seizure type for 487 participants: 0.54, 95% CI 0.38 to 0.78, moderate-quality evidence), showing a statistically significant advantage for carbamazepine compared to phenobarbitone.For our secondary outcomes, we did not find any statistically significant differences between carbamazepine and phenobarbitone: time to first seizure post-randomisation (pooled HR adjusted for seizure type for 822 participants: 1.13, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.38, moderate-quality evidence), time to 12-month remission (pooled HR adjusted for seizure type for 683 participants: 1.09, 95% CI 0.84 to 1.40, low-quality evidence), and time to six-month remission pooled HR adjusted for seizure type for 683 participants: 1.01, 95% CI 0.81 to 1.24, low-quality evidence).Results of these secondary outcomes suggest that there may be an association between treatment effect in terms of efficacy and seizure type; that is, that participants with focal onset seizures experience seizure recurrence later and hence remission of seizures earlier on phenobarbitone than carbamazepine, and vice versa for individuals with generalised seizures. It is likely that the analyses of these outcomes were confounded by several methodological issues and misclassification of seizure type, which could have introduced the heterogeneity and bias into the results of this review.Limited information was available regarding adverse events in the trials and we could not compare the rates of adverse events between carbamazepine and phenobarbitone. Some adverse events reported on both drugs were abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting, drowsiness, motor and cognitive disturbances, dysmorphic side effects (such as rash), and behavioural side effects in three paediatric trials.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Moderate-quality evidence from this review suggests that carbamazepine is likely to be a more effective drug than phenobarbitone in terms of treatment retention (treatment failures due to lack of efficacy or adverse events or both). Moderate- to low-quality evidence from this review also suggests an association between treatment efficacy and seizure type in terms of seizure recurrence and seizure remission, with an advantage for phenobarbitone for focal onset seizures and an advantage for carbamazepine for generalised onset seizures.However, some of the trials contributing to the analyses had methodological inadequacies and inconsistencies that may have impacted upon the results of this review. Therefore, we do not suggest that results of this review alone should form the basis of a treatment choice for a patient with newly onset seizures. We recommend that future trials should be designed to the highest quality possible with consideration of masking, choice of population, classification of seizure type, duration of follow-up, choice of outcomes and analysis, and presentation of results.
这是对先前于2016年发表的Cochrane系统评价的更新版本。本系统评价是一系列调查两两单药治疗比较的Cochrane系统评价之一。癫痫是一种常见的神经系统疾病,大脑异常放电会导致反复发作的无诱因癫痫发作。据信,通过有效的药物治疗,高达70%的活动性癫痫患者在开始使用单一抗癫痫药物进行单药治疗后不久,有可能实现无癫痫发作并进入长期缓解状态。在全球范围内,卡马西平和苯巴比妥是常用的广谱抗癫痫药物,适用于大多数癫痫发作类型。卡马西平是目前治疗局灶性发作的一线药物,在美国和欧洲使用。由于担心相关不良事件,特别是使用该药物治疗的儿童中记录的行为不良事件,苯巴比妥不再被视为一线治疗药物。然而,由于其成本低廉,苯巴比妥在低收入和中等收入国家仍被广泛使用。在个别试验中,未发现卡马西平和苯巴比妥在疗效上存在一致差异;然而,这些试验产生的置信区间较宽,因此,综合个别试验的数据可能会显示出疗效差异。
比较卡马西平和苯巴比妥作为单药治疗局灶性发作(简单或复杂局灶性发作以及继发全身性发作)或全身性强直阵挛发作(伴有或不伴有其他全身性发作类型)患者时,治疗失败、缓解和首次发作的时间。
为进行最新更新,我们于2018年5月24日检索了以下数据库:Cochrane研究注册库(CRS Web),其中包括Cochrane癫痫专业注册库和Cochrane系统评价数据库;MEDLINE;美国国立卫生研究院正在进行的试验注册库(ClinicalTrials.gov);以及世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台(ICTRP)。我们手工检索了相关期刊,并联系了制药公司、原始试验研究者以及该领域的专家。
比较卡马西平或苯巴比妥单药治疗儿童或成人局灶性发作或全身性强直阵挛发作的随机对照试验。
这是一项个体参与者数据(IPD)的系统评价。我们的主要结局是治疗失败时间。次要结局包括随机分组后首次发作时间、6个月缓解时间、12个月缓解时间以及不良事件发生率。我们使用Cox比例风险回归模型获得各试验特定的风险比(HR)估计值及其95%置信区间(CI),采用通用逆方差法获得总体合并HR及95%CI。
我们在本系统评价中纳入了13项试验,来自6项试验的1455名符合条件的个体中有836名个体的IPD可用,占潜在数据的57%。对于缓解结局,HR小于1表明苯巴比妥具有优势,对于首次发作和治疗失败结局,HR小于1表明卡马西平具有优势。本系统评价主要结局的结果如下:因任何与治疗相关的原因导致的治疗失败时间(对676名参与者按发作类型调整后的合并HR:0.66,95%CI 0.50至0.86,中等质量证据),因不良事件导致的治疗失败时间(对619名参与者按发作类型调整后的合并HR:0.69,95%CI 0.49至0.97,低质量证据),因缺乏疗效导致的治疗失败时间(对487名参与者按发作类型调整后的合并HR:0.54,95%CI 0.38至0.78,中等质量证据),表明与苯巴比妥相比,卡马西平具有统计学显著优势。对于我们的次要结局,我们未发现卡马西平和苯巴比妥之间存在任何统计学显著差异:随机分组后首次发作时间(对822名参与者按发作类型调整后的合并HR:1.13,95%CI 0.93至1.38,中等质量证据),12个月缓解时间(对683名参与者按发作类型调整后的合并HR:1.09,95%CI 0.84至1.40,低质量证据),以及6个月缓解时间(对683名参与者按发作类型调整后的合并HR:1.01,95%CI 0.81至1.24,低质量证据)。这些次要结局的结果表明,在疗效方面的治疗效果与发作类型之间可能存在关联;也就是说,局灶性发作的参与者在苯巴比妥治疗下癫痫复发较晚,因此癫痫缓解较早,而全身性发作的个体情况则相反。这些结局的分析可能受到几个方法学问题和发作类型错误分类的混淆,这可能给本系统评价的结果带来异质性和偏差。试验中关于不良事件的信息有限,我们无法比较卡马西平和苯巴比妥之间的不良事件发生率。两种药物都报告的一些不良事件包括腹痛、恶心、呕吐、嗜睡、运动和认知障碍、畸形副作用(如皮疹),以及三项儿科试验中的行为副作用。
本系统评价的中等质量证据表明,就治疗保留率(因缺乏疗效或不良事件或两者导致的治疗失败)而言,卡马西平可能比苯巴比妥更有效。本系统评价的中等至低质量证据还表明,在癫痫复发和缓解方面,治疗效果与发作类型之间存在关联,苯巴比妥对局灶性发作具有优势,卡马西平对全身性发作具有优势。然而,一些纳入分析的试验存在方法学不足和不一致性,这可能影响了本系统评价的结果。因此,我们不建议仅依据本系统评价的结果为新发作癫痫患者做出治疗选择。我们建议未来的试验应尽可能设计到最高质量,同时考虑设盲、人群选择、发作类型分类、随访时间、结局选择与分析以及结果呈现等方面。