School of Pharmacy, Institute for Drug Research, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
Pediatric Neurology Unit, Soroka University Medical Center, Beer Sheva, Israel.
Epilepsia. 2022 Feb;63(2):271-289. doi: 10.1111/epi.17147. Epub 2021 Dec 29.
Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have emerged as the fastest growing drug class. As such, mAbs are increasingly being co-prescribed with other drugs, including antiseizure medications (ASMs). Although mAbs do not share direct targets or mechanisms of disposition with small-molecule drugs (SMDs), combining therapeutics of both types can increase the risk of adverse effects and treatment failure. The primary goal of this literature review was identifying mAb-ASM combinations requiring the attention of professionals who are treating patients with epilepsy. Systematic PubMed and Embase searches (1980-2021) were performed for terms relating to mAbs, ASMs, drug interactions, and their combinations. Additional information was obtained from documents from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA). Evidence was critically appraised - key issues calling for clinicians' consideration and important knowledge gaps were identified, and practice recommendations were developed by a group of pharmacists and epileptologists. The majority of interactions were attributed to the indirect effects of cytokine-modulating antibodies on drug metabolism. Conversely, strong inhibitors or inducers of drug-metabolizing enzymes or drug transporters could potentially interact with the cytotoxic payload of antibody-drug conjugates, and ASMs could alter mAb biodistribution. In addition, mAbs could potentiate adverse ASM effects. Unfortunately, few studies involved ASMs, requiring the formulation of class-based recommendations. Based on the current literature, most mAb-ASM interactions do not warrant special precautions. However, specific combinations should preferably be avoided, whereas others require monitoring and potentially adjustment of the ASM doses. Reduced drug efficacy or adverse effects could manifest days to weeks after mAb treatment onset or discontinuation, complicating the implication of drug interactions in potentially deleterious outcomes. Prescribers who treat patients with epilepsy should be familiar with mAb pharmacology to better anticipate potential mAb-ASM interactions and avoid toxicity, loss of seizure control, or impaired efficacy of mAb treatment.
治疗性单克隆抗体 (mAb) 已成为增长最快的药物类别。因此,mAb 越来越多地与其他药物联合使用,包括抗癫痫药物 (ASM)。尽管 mAb 与小分子药物 (SMD) 没有直接的靶点或处置机制,但联合使用这两种治疗方法会增加不良反应和治疗失败的风险。本次文献综述的主要目的是确定需要治疗癫痫患者的专业人员关注的 mAb-ASM 组合。对涉及 mAb、ASM、药物相互作用及其组合的术语进行了系统的 PubMed 和 Embase 搜索(1980-2021 年)。还从美国食品和药物管理局 (FDA) 和欧洲药品管理局 (EMA) 的文件中获取了额外的信息。对证据进行了严格评估-确定了需要临床医生考虑的关键问题和重要的知识空白,并由一组药剂师和癫痫专家制定了实践建议。大多数相互作用归因于细胞因子调节抗体对药物代谢的间接影响。相反,药物代谢酶或药物转运体的强抑制剂或诱导剂可能会与抗体药物偶联物的细胞毒性有效载荷相互作用,而 ASM 可以改变 mAb 的生物分布。此外,mAb 可以增强 ASM 的不良反应。不幸的是,涉及 ASM 的研究很少,需要制定基于类别的建议。根据目前的文献,大多数 mAb-ASM 相互作用不需要特殊预防措施。但是,最好避免特定的组合,而其他组合则需要监测并可能调整 ASM 剂量。在 mAb 治疗开始或停止后几天到几周内,药物疗效降低或不良反应可能会显现,这使得药物相互作用在潜在有害结果中的影响复杂化。治疗癫痫患者的处方者应熟悉 mAb 药理学,以更好地预测潜在的 mAb-ASM 相互作用,并避免毒性、癫痫发作控制丧失或 mAb 治疗效果受损。