Riva R, Albani F, Contin M, Baruzzi A
Epilepsy Center, University Department of Neurology, Bologna, Italy.
Clin Pharmacokinet. 1996 Dec;31(6):470-93. doi: 10.2165/00003088-199631060-00005.
Antiepileptic drug interactions represent a common clinical problem which has been compounded by the introduction of many new compounds in recent years. Most pharmacokinetic interactions involve the modification of drug metabolism; the propensity of antiepileptic drugs to interact depends on their metabolic characteristics and action on drug metabolic enzymes. Phenobarbital, phenytoin, primidone and carbamazepine are potent inducers of cytochrome P450 (CYP), epoxide hydrolase and uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase (UDPGT) enzyme systems; oxcarbazepine is a weak inducer of CYP enzymes, probably acting on a few specific isoforms only. All stimulate the rate of metabolism and the clearance of the drugs which are catabolised by the induced enzymes. Valproic acid (valproate sodium) inhibits to different extents many hepatic enzyme system activities involved in drug metabolism and is able to significantly displace drugs from plasma albumin. Felbamate is an inhibitor of some specific CYP isoforms and mitochondrial beta-oxidation, whereas it is a weak inducer of other enzyme systems. Topiramate is an inducer of specific CYP isoforms and an inhibitor of other isoforms. Ethosuximide, vigabatrin, lamotrigine, gabapentin and possibly zonisamide and tiagabine have no significant effect on hepatic drug metabolism. Apart from vigabatrin and gabapentin, which are mainly eliminated unchanged by the renal route, all other antiepileptic drugs are metabolised wholly or in part by hepatic enzymes and their disposition may be altered by metabolic changes. Some interactions are clinically unremarkable and some need only careful clinical monitoring, but others require prompt dosage adjustment. From a practical point of view, if valproic acid is added to lamotrigine or phenobarbital therapy, or if felbamate is added to phenobarbital, phenytoin or valproic acid therapy, a significant rise in plasma concentrations of the first drug is expected with a corresponding increase in clinical effects. In these cases a concomitant reduction of the dosage of the first drug is recommended to avoid toxicity. Conversely, if a strong inducer is added to carbamazepine, lamotrigine, valproic acid or ethosuximide monotherapy, a significant decrease in their plasma concentrations is expected within days or weeks, with a possible reduction in efficacy. In these cases a dosage increase of the first drug may be required.
抗癫痫药物相互作用是一个常见的临床问题,近年来许多新化合物的引入使这一问题更加复杂。大多数药代动力学相互作用涉及药物代谢的改变;抗癫痫药物相互作用的倾向取决于它们的代谢特征以及对药物代谢酶的作用。苯巴比妥、苯妥英、扑米酮和卡马西平是细胞色素P450(CYP)、环氧水解酶和尿苷二磷酸葡萄糖醛酸转移酶(UDPGT)酶系统的强效诱导剂;奥卡西平是CYP酶的弱诱导剂,可能仅作用于少数特定的同工酶。它们均能刺激被诱导酶分解代谢的药物的代谢速率和清除率。丙戊酸(丙戊酸钠)不同程度地抑制许多参与药物代谢的肝酶系统活性,并能使药物从血浆白蛋白中显著置换出来。非氨酯是某些特定CYP同工酶和线粒体β氧化的抑制剂,而它是其他酶系统的弱诱导剂。托吡酯是特定CYP同工酶的诱导剂和其他同工酶的抑制剂。乙琥胺、氨己烯酸、拉莫三嗪、加巴喷丁以及可能的唑尼沙胺和噻加宾对肝脏药物代谢无显著影响。除主要经肾途径以原形排泄的氨己烯酸和加巴喷丁外,所有其他抗癫痫药物均全部或部分经肝酶代谢,其处置可能因代谢变化而改变。一些相互作用在临床上不显著,一些仅需仔细的临床监测,但其他一些则需要迅速调整剂量。从实际角度来看,如果将丙戊酸添加到拉莫三嗪或苯巴比妥治疗中,或者如果将非氨酯添加到苯巴比妥、苯妥英或丙戊酸治疗中,预计第一种药物的血浆浓度会显著升高,临床效果也会相应增加。在这些情况下,建议同时减少第一种药物的剂量以避免毒性。相反,如果将一种强效诱导剂添加到卡马西平、拉莫三嗪、丙戊酸或乙琥胺单药治疗中,预计其血浆浓度会在数天或数周内显著降低,疗效可能会下降。在这些情况下,可能需要增加第一种药物的剂量。