Battino D, Estienne M, Avanzini G
Neurological Institute Carlo Besta, Milan, Italy.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 1995 Nov;29(5):341-69. doi: 10.2165/00003088-199529050-00004.
This article is the second part of a review of the pharmacokinetics of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) in paediatric patients. It reviews 139 papers published since 1969 on the pharmacokinetics of phenytoin, carbamazepine, sulthiame, lamotrigine (phenyltriazine), vigabatrin, oxcarbazepine and felbamate in this population. The pharmacokinetics of phenytoin are significantly affected by age. The terminal elimination half-life (t1/2z) is relatively long in neonates; it then decreases during the first postnatal month to lower values than in adults, and then progressively increases with age due to an age-dependent decrease in the metabolic rate. Rate of elimination is strongly dose-dependent at all ages. The combination of these factors makes it difficult to predict what plasma concentrations would result from dose per kilogram (dose/kg) adjustments in neonates and children, especially when phenytoin is coadministered with other liver enzyme-inducing drugs, such as phenobarbital and carbamazepine. The concentration of phenytoin in brain and other tissues depends on the unbound/total concentration ratio. For neonates this ratio is higher than that found in adults; it then decreases over the first 3 postnatal months to approach adult values. The fraction of unbound phenytoin is significantly higher in patients also receiving valproic acid. Carbamazepine is almost completely epoxidised to the active metabolite carbamazepine epoxide, which is in turn converted to carbamazepine diol. Metabolic conversion of carbamazepine and renal clearance of carbamazepine diol are much higher in children than in adults; t1/2z of carbamazepine is thus very short in young children, increasing with age. No data are available on the neonatal period. The carbamazepine epoxide/carbamazepine ratio may be significantly increased by metabolic inducers (e.g. phenytoin, phenobarbital and primidone) or by inhibitors of the carbamazepine epoxide to carbamazepine diol conversion (e.g. valproic acid). Macrolides inhibit carbamazepine metabolism, thus increasing carbamazepine plasma concentrations. Drug-induced changes in carbamazepine kinetics are particularly pronounced in children. In children, a higher dose/kg of sulthiame, lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine and felbamate than in adults is required to obtain an effective plasma concentration. The published data do not support the use of a different dose/kg of vigabatrin in children age between 1 month and 15 years. The pharmacokinetic information in the paediatric literature may help in assessing AED prescriptions in childhood to prevent seizures and AED-related adverse effects on the ongoing maturational processes of the brain.
本文是抗癫痫药物(AEDs)在儿科患者中药代动力学综述的第二部分。它回顾了自1969年以来发表的139篇关于苯妥英、卡马西平、舒噻美、拉莫三嗪(苯基三嗪)、氨己烯酸、奥卡西平和非氨酯在该人群中药代动力学的论文。苯妥英的药代动力学受年龄影响显著。新生儿的终末消除半衰期(t1/2z)相对较长;在出生后的第一个月内它会下降,降至低于成人的值,然后随着年龄增长由于代谢率的年龄依赖性下降而逐渐增加。消除速率在所有年龄段都强烈依赖于剂量。这些因素的综合作用使得难以预测新生儿和儿童按每千克体重调整剂量(剂量/千克)后会产生何种血浆浓度,尤其是当苯妥英与其他肝酶诱导药物如苯巴比妥和卡马西平合用时。苯妥英在脑和其他组织中的浓度取决于游离/总浓度比。对于新生儿,该比值高于成人;在出生后的前3个月内它会下降,接近成人值。同时接受丙戊酸治疗的患者中游离苯妥英的比例显著更高。卡马西平几乎完全环氧化为活性代谢产物卡马西平环氧化物,而卡马西平环氧化物又会转化为卡马西平二醇。儿童中卡马西平的代谢转化和卡马西平二醇的肾清除率比成人高得多;因此幼儿中卡马西平的t1/2z非常短,随年龄增长而增加。关于新生儿期尚无数据。卡马西平环氧化物/卡马西平的比值可能会因代谢诱导剂(如苯妥英、苯巴比妥和扑米酮)或卡马西平环氧化物向卡马西平二醇转化的抑制剂(如丙戊酸)而显著增加。大环内酯类药物抑制卡马西平代谢,从而增加卡马西平血浆浓度。药物引起的卡马西平动力学变化在儿童中尤为明显。在儿童中,为获得有效的血浆浓度,舒噻美、拉莫三嗪、奥卡西平和非氨酯所需的每千克体重剂量高于成人。已发表的数据不支持在1个月至15岁的儿童中使用不同的氨己烯酸每千克体重剂量。儿科文献中的药代动力学信息可能有助于评估儿童期的抗癫痫药物处方,以预防癫痫发作以及抗癫痫药物对大脑正在进行的成熟过程产生的相关不良反应。