1. Phenytoin toxicity due to interaction with clobazam
- Author
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Zifkin, Benjamin, Sherwin, Allan, and Andermann, Frederick
- Subjects
Anticonvulsants -- Adverse and side effects ,Phenytoin -- Health aspects ,Benzodiazepines -- Adverse and side effects ,Seizures (Medicine) -- Drug therapy ,Health ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Clobazam is a benzodiazepine; it is chemically substituted as the 1 and 5 positions, in contrast to the 1,4-benzodiazepines. The drug is under evaluation in Canada as an add-on drug for epileptic seizures which do not respond to conventional antiepileptic treatments. Clobazam produces fewer cognitive side effects than the 1,4-benzodiazepines, and is generally well tolerated. Three cases are now reported, however, in which the addition of clobazam to a phenytoin-based (the drug, Dilantin) regimen resulted in the development of phenytoin toxicity. All three patients developed lethargy within a few weeks of the introduction of clobazam, in two cases the patients also became ataxic. However, seizure activity improved in all three cases. Blood analysis revealed that the phenytoin levels for the three patients were 29.0, 31.6, and 33.1 milligrams per liter, well above the therapeutic level for this drug. The phenytoin dose was reduced or eliminated and the symptoms resolved. In two cases, the dose of clobazam was eventually increased without ill effect. The results suggest that the introduction of clobazam may have adversely affected the patients' abilities to metabolize the phenytoin. The molar levels of clobazam are thought to be too small to replace phenytoin bound to plasma proteins and produce higher blood levels in this fashion. Rather, it seems likely that the clobazam interfered with the breakdown of phenytoin in the liver, a process which may already have been close to saturation in these patients. (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
- Published
- 1991