Maguire Melissa J, Nevitt Sarah J
Department of Neurology, Leeds General Infirmary, Great George Street, Leeds, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Oct 14;10(10):CD013225. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013225.pub2.
Catamenial epilepsy describes a worsening of seizures in relation to the menstrual cycle and may affect around 40% of women with epilepsy. Vulnerable days of the menstrual cycle for seizures are perimenstrually (C1 pattern), at ovulation (C2 pattern), and during the luteal phase (C3 pattern). A reduction in progesterone levels premenstrually and reduced secretion during the luteal phase is implicated in catamenial C1 and C3 patterns. A reduction in progesterone has been demonstrated to reduce sensitivity to the inhibitory neurotransmitter in preclinical studies, hence increasing risk of seizures. A pre-ovulatory surge in oestrogen has been implicated in the C2 pattern of seizure exacerbation, although the exact mechanism by which this surge increases risk is uncertain. Current treatment practices include the use of pulsed hormonal (e.g. progesterone) and non-hormonal treatments (e.g. clobazam or acetazolamide) in women with regular menses, and complete cessation of menstruation using synthetic hormones (e.g. medroxyprogesterone (Depo-Provera) or gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) analogues (triptorelin and goserelin)) in women with irregular menses.Catamenial epilepsy and seizure exacerbation is common in women with epilepsy, and may have a significant negative impact on quality of life. Women may not be receiving appropriate treatment for their seizures because of uncertainty regarding which treatment works best and when in the menstrual cycle treatment should be taken, as well as the possible impact on fertility, the menstrual cycle, bone health, and cardiovascular health. This review aimed to address these issues in order to inform clinical practice and future research.
To evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of hormonal and non-hormonal treatments for seizures exacerbated by the menstrual cycle in women with regular or irregular menses. We synthesised the evidence from randomised controlled trials of hormonal and non-hormonal treatments in women with catamenial epilepsy of any pattern.
We searched the following databases to 10 January 2019: Cochrane Register of Studies (CRS Web; includes the Cochrane Epilepsy Group Specialized Register and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL)), MEDLINE (Ovid: 1946 to 9 January 2019), ClinicalTrials.gov, and the World Health Organization (WHO) International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP). We used no language restrictions. We checked the reference lists of retrieved studies for additional reports of relevant studies.
We included randomised and quasi-randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of blinded or opeṉlabel design that randomised participants individually (i.e. cluster-randomised trials were excluded). We included cross-over trials if each treatment period was at least 12 weeks in length and the trial had a suitable wash-out period. Types of interventions included: women with any pattern of catamenial epilepsy who received a hormonal or non-hormonal drug intervention in addition to an existing antiepileptic drug regimen for a minimum treatment duration of 12 weeks.
We extracted data on study design factors and participant demographics for the included studies. The primary outcomes of interest were: proportion seizure-free, proportion of responders (at least 50% decrease in seizure frequency from baseline), and mean change in seizure frequency. Secondary outcomes included: number of withdrawals, number of women experiencing adverse events of interest (seizure exacerbation, cardiac events, thromboembolic events, osteoporosis and bone health, mood disorders, sedation, menstrual cycle disorders, and fertility issues), and quality of life outcomes.
We identified 62 records from the databases and search strategies. Following title, abstract, and full-text screening, we included eight full-text articles reporting on four double-blind, placebo-controlled RCTs. We included two cross-over RCTs of pulsed norethisterone and two parallel RCTs of pulsed progesterone recruiting a total of 192 women aged between 13 and 45 years with catamenial epilepsy. We found no RCTs for non-hormonal treatments of catamenial epilepsy or for women with irregular menses.Meta-analysis was not possible for the primary outcomes, therefore we undertook a narrative synthesis. For the two RCTs evaluating norethisterone versus placebo (24 participants), there were no reported treatment differences for mean change in seizure frequency. Outcomes for the proportion seizure-free and 50% responders were not reported. For the RCTs evaluating progesterone versus placebo (168 participants), the studies reported conflicting results on the primary outcomes. One progesterone RCT reported no significant difference between progesterone 600 mg/day taken on day 14 to 28 and placebo with respect to 50% responders, seizure freedom rates, and change in seizure frequency for any seizure type. The other progesterone RCT reported that the decrease in seizure frequency from baseline in the progesterone group was significantly higher than the decrease in seizure frequency from baseline in the placebo group.Results of secondary efficacy outcomes showed no significant difference in terms of treatment withdrawal for any reason in the pooled progesterone RCTs when compared to placebo (pooled risk ratio (RR) 1.56, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.81 to 3.00, P = 0.18, I = 0%) or for treatment withdrawals due to adverse events (pooled RR 2.91, 95% CI 0.53 to 16.17, P = 0.22, I = 0%). No treatment withdrawals from the norethisterone RCTs were reported. The RCTs reported limited information on adverse events, although one progesterone RCT reported no significant difference in the number of women experiencing adverse events (diarrhoea, dyspepsia, nausea, vomiting, fatigue, nasopharyngitis, dizziness, headache, and depression). No studies reported on quality of life.We judged the evidence from the included progesterone RCTs to be of low to moderate certainty due to risk of bias and from the included norethisterone RCTs to be of very low certainty due to serious imprecision and risk of bias.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This review provides very low-certainty evidence of no treatment difference between norethisterone and placebo, and moderate- to low-certainty evidence of no treatment difference between progesterone and placebo for catamenial epilepsy. However, as all the included studies were underpowered, important clinical effects cannot be ruled out.Our review highlighted an overall deficiency in the literature base on the effectiveness of a wide range of other hormonal and non-hormonal interventions currently being used in practice, particularly for those patients who do not have regular menses. Further clinical trials are needed in this area.
经期性癫痫是指癫痫发作与月经周期相关且病情加重,约40%的癫痫女性可能受其影响。月经周期中癫痫发作的易患期为围经期(C1型)、排卵期(C2型)和黄体期(C3型)。经前期孕酮水平降低以及黄体期分泌减少与经期性癫痫的C1型和C3型有关。临床前研究表明,孕酮水平降低会降低对抑制性神经递质的敏感性,从而增加癫痫发作风险。排卵前雌激素激增与癫痫发作加重的C2型有关,尽管这种激增增加风险的确切机制尚不确定。目前的治疗方法包括,对于月经周期规律的女性,采用脉冲式激素治疗(如孕酮)和非激素治疗(如氯巴占或乙酰唑胺);对于月经周期不规律的女性,则使用合成激素(如甲羟孕酮(长效避孕针)或促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)类似物(曲普瑞林和戈舍瑞林))使月经完全停止。经期性癫痫和癫痫发作加重在癫痫女性中很常见,可能对生活质量产生重大负面影响。由于不确定哪种治疗方法效果最佳以及应在月经周期的何时进行治疗,以及对生育、月经周期、骨骼健康和心血管健康可能产生的影响,女性可能未接受针对其癫痫发作的适当治疗。本综述旨在解决这些问题,为临床实践和未来研究提供参考。
评估激素和非激素治疗对月经周期加重的癫痫发作在月经周期规律或不规律女性中的疗效和耐受性。我们综合了来自任何类型经期性癫痫女性激素和非激素治疗的随机对照试验的证据。
我们检索了以下数据库至2019年1月10日:Cochrane研究注册库(CRS网络版;包括Cochrane癫痫小组专业注册库和Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL))、MEDLINE(Ovid:1946年至2019年1月9日)、ClinicalTrials.gov和世界卫生组织(WHO)国际临床试验注册平台(ICTRP)。我们未设语言限制。我们检查了检索到的研究的参考文献列表,以获取相关研究的其他报告。
我们纳入了盲法或开放标签设计的随机和半随机对照试验(RCT),这些试验对参与者进行个体随机分组(即排除整群随机试验)。如果每个治疗期至少持续12周且试验有合适的洗脱期,我们纳入交叉试验。干预类型包括:任何类型经期性癫痫的女性,除现有的抗癫痫药物治疗方案外,接受激素或非激素药物干预,最短治疗持续时间为12周。
我们提取了纳入研究的研究设计因素和参与者人口统计学数据。主要关注的结局包括:无癫痫发作比例、有反应者比例(癫痫发作频率较基线至少降低50%)以及癫痫发作频率的平均变化。次要结局包括:退出人数、经历感兴趣不良事件(癫痫发作加重、心脏事件、血栓栓塞事件、骨质疏松和骨骼健康、情绪障碍、镇静、月经周期紊乱和生育问题)的女性人数以及生活质量结局。
我们通过数据库和检索策略识别出62条记录。经过标题、摘要和全文筛选,我们纳入了8篇全文文章,这些文章报告了4项双盲、安慰剂对照的RCT。我们纳入了2项关于脉冲式炔诺酮的交叉RCT和2项关于脉冲式孕酮的平行RCT,共招募了192名年龄在13至45岁之间的经期性癫痫女性。我们未找到关于经期性癫痫非激素治疗或月经周期不规律女性的RCT。由于主要结局无法进行Meta分析,因此我们进行了叙述性综合分析。对于评估炔诺酮与安慰剂的2项RCT(24名参与者),未报告癫痫发作频率平均变化的治疗差异。未报告无癫痫发作比例和50%有反应者的结局。对于评估孕酮与安慰剂的RCT(168名参与者),研究报告了主要结局的相互矛盾结果。一项孕酮RCT报告,在第14至28天服用600 mg/天孕酮与安慰剂相比,在50%有反应者、无癫痫发作率以及任何癫痫发作类型的癫痫发作频率变化方面无显著差异。另一项孕酮RCT报告,孕酮组癫痫发作频率较基线的降低显著高于安慰剂组癫痫发作频率较基线的降低。次要疗效结局结果显示,与安慰剂相比,汇总的孕酮RCT中因任何原因退出治疗无显著差异(汇总风险比(RR)1.56,95%置信区间(CI)0.81至3.00,P = 0.18,I² = 0%),因不良事件退出治疗也无显著差异(汇总RR 2.91,95%CI 0.53至16.17,P = 0.22,I² = 0%)。炔诺酮RCT未报告退出治疗情况。RCT报告的不良事件信息有限,尽管一项孕酮RCT报告,经历不良事件(腹泻、消化不良、恶心、呕吐、疲劳、鼻咽炎、头晕、头痛和抑郁)的女性人数无显著差异。未报告生活质量研究。由于存在偏倚风险,我们判断纳入的孕酮RCT的证据确定性为低到中等,而由于严重不精确性和偏倚风险,纳入的炔诺酮RCT的证据确定性为非常低。
本综述提供了非常低确定性的证据表明,炔诺酮与安慰剂之间无治疗差异;提供了中等至低确定性的证据表明,孕酮与安慰剂之间对于经期性癫痫无治疗差异。然而,由于所有纳入研究的样本量不足,不能排除重要的临床效果。我们的综述强调,目前实践中使用的其他多种激素和非激素干预措施有效性的文献基础总体不足,特别是对于月经周期不规律的患者。该领域需要进一步的临床试验。