Salford Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Salford, UK.
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Institute of Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Sep 23;9(9):CD010062. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010062.pub3.
This is an updated version of the original Cochrane Review published in 2014. Epilepsy is a common neurological condition characterised by recurrent seizures. Pharmacological treatment remains the first choice to control epilepsy. Sulthiame (STM) is widely used as an antiepileptic drug in Europe and Israel. In this review, we have presented a summary of evidence for the use of STM as monotherapy in epilepsy.
To assess the efficacy and side effect profile of STM as monotherapy when compared with placebo or another antiepileptic drug for people with epilepsy.
We searched the following databases on 13 April 2020: the Cochrane Register of Studies (CRS Web), MEDLINE (Ovid, 1946 to 10 April 2020). CRS Web includes randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials from PubMed, Embase, ClinicalTrials.gov, the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), and the specialised registers of Cochrane Review Groups including Cochrane Epilepsy. We imposed no language restrictions. We contacted the manufacturers of STM and researchers in the field to ask about ongoing and unpublished studies.
Randomised controlled monotherapy trials of STM in people of any age with epilepsy of any aetiology.
We followed standard Cochrane methodology. Two review authors independently selected trials for inclusion and extracted the relevant data. We assessed the following outcomes: treatment withdrawal; seizure-free at six months; adverse effects; and quality of life scoring. We conducted the primary analyses by intention-to-treat where possible, and presented a narrative analysis of the data.
We included four studies involving a total of 355 participants: three studies (209 participants) with a diagnosis of benign epilepsy of childhood with centrotemporal spikes (BECTS), and one study (146 participants) with a diagnosis of generalised tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS). STM was given as monotherapy compared with placebo and with levetiracetam in the BECTS studies, and compared with phenytoin in the GTCS study. An English translation of the full text of one of the BECTS studies could not be found, and analysis of this study was based solely on the English translation of the abstract. For the primary outcome, the total number of dropouts caused either by seizure recurrence or adverse reaction was significantly higher in the levetiracetam treatment arm compared to the STM treatment arm (RR 0.32, 95% Cl 0.10 to 1.03; 1 study, 43 participants; low-certainty evidence). For the secondary outcomes for this comparison, results for seizure freedom were inconclusive (RR 1.12, 95% Cl 0.88 to 1.44; 1 study, 43 participants; low-certainty evidence). Reporting of adverse effects was incomplete. Participants receiving STM were significantly less likely to develop gingival hyperplasia than participants receiving phenytoin in the GTCS study (RR 0.03, 95% CI 0.00 to 0.58; 1 study, 146 participants; low-certainty evidence). No further statistically significant adverse events were noted when STM was compared with phenytoin or placebo. The most common adverse events were related to behavioural disturbances when STM was compared with levetiracetam (RR 0.95, 95% Cl 0.59 to 1.55; 1 study, 43 participants; low-certainty evidence), with the same incidence in both groups. No data were reported for quality of life. Overall, we assessed one study at high risk of bias and one study at unclear bias across the seven domains, mainly due to lack of information regarding study design. Only one trial reported effective methods for blinding. The risk of bias assessments for the other two studies ranged from low to high. We rated the overall certainty of the evidence for the outcomes as low using the GRADE approach.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This review provides insufficient information to inform clinical practice. Small sample sizes, poor methodological quality, and lack of data on important outcome measures precluded any meaningful conclusions regarding the efficacy and tolerability of sulthiame as monotherapy in epilepsy. More trials, recruiting larger populations, over longer periods, are needed to determine whether sulthiame has a clinical use.
这是 Cochrane 综述的更新版本,最初发表于 2014 年。癫痫是一种常见的神经系统疾病,其特征是反复发作的癫痫发作。药物治疗仍然是控制癫痫的首选方法。硫噻嗪(STM)在欧洲和以色列被广泛用作抗癫痫药物。在本次综述中,我们总结了 STM 作为单药治疗癫痫的证据。
评估 STM 作为单药治疗癫痫时与安慰剂或其他抗癫痫药物相比的疗效和副作用特征。
我们于 2020 年 4 月 13 日检索了以下数据库:Cochrane 研究注册库(CRS Web)、MEDLINE(Ovid,1946 年至 2020 年 4 月 10 日)。CRS Web 包括来自 PubMed、Embase、ClinicalTrials.gov、世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台、Cochrane 中心对照试验注册库(CENTRAL)以及包括 Cochrane 癫痫组在内的专门注册库的随机或准随机对照试验。我们没有设置语言限制。我们联系了 STM 的制造商和该领域的研究人员,询问正在进行和未发表的研究。
任何年龄、任何病因的癫痫患者的随机对照单药治疗试验。
我们遵循了标准的 Cochrane 方法。两位综述作者独立选择纳入的试验并提取相关数据。我们评估了以下结局:治疗中断;六个月内无癫痫发作;不良反应;以及生活质量评分。我们尽可能地进行了意向治疗分析,并对数据进行了叙述性分析。
我们纳入了四项研究,共涉及 355 名参与者:三项研究(209 名参与者)为良性儿童癫痫伴中央颞区棘波(BECTS),一项研究(146 名参与者)为全面强直阵挛性发作(GTCS)。STM 作为单药治疗与安慰剂和左乙拉西坦在 BECTS 研究中进行了比较,与苯妥英钠在 GTCS 研究中进行了比较。一项 BECTS 研究的全文英文翻译无法找到,对该研究的分析仅基于摘要的英文翻译。对于主要结局,与 STM 治疗组相比,左乙拉西坦治疗组因癫痫发作或不良反应导致的退出人数明显更高(RR 0.32,95%Cl 0.10 至 1.03;1 项研究,43 名参与者;低质量证据)。对于该比较的次要结局,癫痫无发作的结果不确定(RR 1.12,95%Cl 0.88 至 1.44;1 项研究,43 名参与者;低质量证据)。不良反应的报告不完整。与接受苯妥英钠治疗的参与者相比,接受 STM 治疗的参与者发生牙龈增生的可能性明显较低(RR 0.03,95%CI 0.00 至 0.58;1 项研究,146 名参与者;低质量证据)。当 STM 与苯妥英钠或安慰剂相比时,没有观察到其他具有统计学意义的不良事件。当 STM 与左乙拉西坦相比时,最常见的不良事件与行为障碍有关(RR 0.95,95%Cl 0.59 至 1.55;1 项研究,43 名参与者;低质量证据),两组的发生率相同。没有报告生活质量的数据。总体而言,我们将一项研究评估为高偏倚风险,一项研究评估为七个领域的不确定偏倚,主要是由于缺乏有关研究设计的信息。只有一项试验报告了有效的双盲方法。另外两项研究的偏倚风险评估范围从低到高。我们使用 GRADE 方法将证据的总体确定性评为低。
本综述提供的信息不足以为临床实践提供依据。样本量小、方法学质量差以及缺乏重要结局指标的数据,使得我们无法就硫噻嗪作为癫痫单药治疗的疗效和耐受性得出任何有意义的结论。需要更多的试验,招募更大的人群,进行更长时间的研究,以确定硫噻嗪是否具有临床应用价值。