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Adjunctive therapy with oxcarbazepine in children with partial seizures

Authors :
L M Frank
Lynn D. Kramer
Tracy A. Glauser
G Geoffroy
D Mandelbaum
L A Pasteris
Joseph D'Souza
Rajesh C. Sachdeo
D Bettis
M Nigro
T Jacobs
Bassel Abou-Khalil
P. Mesenbrink
T Guarino
Augusto Grinspan
J Kerrigan
S Weinstein
Source :
Neurology. 54:2237-2244
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2000.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of oxcarbazepine (OXC) as adjunctive therapy in children with inadequately controlled partial seizures on one or two concomitant antiepileptic drugs (AEDs).Background: OXC has shown antiepileptic activity in several comparative monotherapy trials in newly diagnosed patients with epilepsy, and in a placebo-controlled monotherapy trial in hospitalized patients evaluated for epilepsy surgery.Design: A total of 267 patients were evaluated in a multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled trial consisting of three phases: 1) a 56-day baseline phase (patients maintained on their current AEDs); 2) a 112-day double-blind treatment phase (patients received either OXC 30–46 mg/kg/day orally or placebo); and 3) an open-label extension phase. Data are reported only from the double-blind treatment phase; the open-label extension phase is ongoing.Methods: Children (3 to 17 years old) with inadequately controlled partial seizures (simple, complex, and partial seizures evolving to secondarily generalized seizures) were enrolled.Results: Patients treated with OXC experienced a significantly greater median percent reduction from baseline in partial seizure frequency than patients treated with placebo (p = 0.0001; 35% versus 9%, respectively). Forty-one percent of patients treated with OXC experienced a ≥50% reduction from baseline in partial seizure frequency per 28 days compared with 22% of patients treated with placebo (p = 0.0005). Ninety-one percent of the group treated with OXC and 82% of the group treated with placebo reported ≥1 adverse event; vomiting, somnolence, dizziness, and nausea occurred more frequently (twofold or greater) in the group treated with OXC.Conclusion: OXC adjunctive therapy administered in a dose range of 6 to 51 mg/kg/day (median 31.4 mg/kg/day) is safe, effective, and well tolerated in children with partial seizures.

Details

ISSN :
1526632X and 00283878
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4e08faf8444010457b0d97106fc0ec1f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.54.12.2237