Comprehensive Epilepsy Care Center for Children and Adults, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Epilepsia. 2021 Dec;62(12):3016-3028. doi: 10.1111/epi.17092. Epub 2021 Oct 11.
To report post hoc results on how adjustments to baseline antiseizure medications (ASMs) in a subset of study sites (10 US sites) from a long-term, open-label phase 3 study of adjunctive cenobamate affected tolerability, efficacy, and retention.
Patients with uncontrolled focal seizures taking stable doses of one to three ASMs were administered increasing doses of cenobamate (12.5, 25, 50, 100, 150, 200 mg/day) over 12 weeks at 2-week intervals (target dose = 200 mg/day). Further increases to 400 mg/day by 50 mg/day biweekly increments were allowed during maintenance phase. Dose adjustments of cenobamate and concomitant ASMs were allowed. Data were assessed until last visit, at data cut-off, on or after September 1, 2019.
A total of 240 patients meeting eligibility criteria were assessed (median [max] exposure 30.2 [43.0] months), with 177 patients continuing cenobamate at data cut-off. Most common baseline concomitant ASMs were lacosamide, levetiracetam, lamotrigine, zonisamide, and clobazam. For most baseline concomitant ASMs, ~70% of patients taking that ASM were continuing cenobamate at data cut-off. Patients continuing cenobamate had greater mean ASM dose reductions and percent dose changes from baseline vs those who discontinued. Of patients continuing cenobamate, 24.6% discontinued one or more concomitant ASMs completely. Dose decreases for all concomitant ASMs generally occurred during titration or early maintenance phases and were mostly due to central nervous system (CNS)-related adverse events such as somnolence, dizziness, unsteady gait, and fatigue. Responder rates from ≥50% through 100% for patients continuing cenobamate were generally similar regardless of concomitant ASMs (of those most commonly taken), with ~81% being ≥50% responders and ~12% achieving 100% seizure reduction in the maintenance phase, which lasted up to 40.2 (median = 29.5) months.
Concomitant ASM dose reductions were associated with more patients remaining on cenobamate. This is likely due to efficacy and improved tolerability, with overall reduced concomitant drug burden in patients with uncontrolled seizures despite taking one to three baseline concomitant ASMs.
报告一项长期、开放标签的 3 期附加用依诺加巴试验中,部分研究地点(美国 10 个地点)根据基线抗癫痫药物(ASM)调整情况的事后结果,这些结果影响了耐受性、疗效和保留率。
接受稳定剂量的一种至三种 ASM 药物治疗、伴有局灶性癫痫发作控制不佳的患者,以 2 周间隔接受递增剂量的依诺加巴(12.5、25、50、100、150、200mg/天)治疗,共 12 周(目标剂量=200mg/天)。在维持期期间,允许通过每两周增加 50mg 剂量进一步增加至 400mg/天。允许调整依诺加巴和伴随的 ASM 剂量。数据评估至最后一次就诊、数据截止时(2019 年 9 月 1 日或之后)。
共有 240 名符合入选标准的患者接受评估(中位数[最大]暴露时间为 30.2[43.0]个月),177 名患者在数据截止时继续使用依诺加巴。最常见的基线伴随 ASM 是拉科酰胺、左乙拉西坦、拉莫三嗪、佐米曲普坦和氯巴占。对于大多数基线伴随 ASM,约 70%服用该 ASM 的患者在数据截止时继续使用依诺加巴。继续使用依诺加巴的患者与停药患者相比,ASM 剂量平均减少更多,剂量变化百分比也更大。继续使用依诺加巴的患者中,有 24.6%的患者完全停用一种或多种伴随 ASM。所有伴随 ASM 的剂量减少通常发生在滴定或早期维持阶段,主要是由于与中枢神经系统(CNS)相关的不良事件,如嗜睡、头晕、步态不稳和疲劳。继续使用依诺加巴的患者的应答率通常相似,无论伴随 ASM 如何(最常服用的药物),≥50%至 100%的患者中有 24.6%的患者完全停用一种或多种伴随 ASM。应答率从≥50%至 100%不等,在维持期(最长 40.2[中位数=29.5]个月)内,有81%的患者为≥50%应答者,12%的患者达到 100%的癫痫发作减少。
伴随 ASM 剂量减少与更多患者继续使用依诺加巴有关。这可能是由于疗效和耐受性改善,尽管接受一种至三种基线伴随 ASM,但伴有局灶性癫痫发作控制不佳的患者总体上降低了伴随药物的负担。