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Cerebral MRI abnormalities associated with vigabatrin therapy

Authors :
Marcio Sotero De Menezes
Nadja Kadom
William McClintock
William D. Gaillard
Phillip L. Pearl
Elizabeth Molloy-Wells
L. G. Vezina
Raymond Ferri
Elizabeth Gilles
Joan A. Conry
Nancy Elling
Russell P. Saneto
Robert McCarter
Ari Heffron
Stacey Trzcinski
Howard P. Goodkin
Source :
Epilepsia. 50:184-194
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Wiley, 2009.

Abstract

Summary Purpose: Investigate whether patients on vigabatrin demonstrated new-onset and reversible T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities. Methods: MRI of patients treated during vigabatrin therapy was reviewed, following detection of new basal ganglia, thalamus, and corpus callosum hyperintensities in an infant treated for infantile spasms. Patients were assessed for age at time of MRI, diagnosis, duration, and dose, MRI findings pre-, on, and postvigabatrin, concomitant medications, and clinical correlation. These findings were compared to MRI in patients with infantile spasms who did not receive vigabatrin. Results: Twenty-three patients were identified as having MRI during the course of vigabatrin therapy. After excluding the index case, we detected new and reversible basal ganglia, thalamic, brainstem, or dentate nucleus abnormalities in 7 of 22 (32%) patients treated with vigabatrin. All findings were reversible following discontinuation of therapy. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) was positive with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps demonstrating restricted diffusion. Affected versus unaffected patients, respectively, had a median age of 11 months versus 5 years, therapy duration 3 months versus 12 months, and dosage 170 mg/kg/day versus 87 mg/kg/day. All affected patients were treated for infantile spasms; none of 56 patients with infantile spasms who were not treated with vigabatrin showed the same abnormalities. Discussion: MRI abnormalities attributable to vigabatrin, characterized by new-onset and reversible T2-weighted hyperintensities and restricted diffusion in thalami, globus pallidus, dentate nuclei, brainstem, or corpus callosum were identified in 8 of 23 patients. Young age and relatively high dose appear to be risk factors.

Details

ISSN :
15281167 and 00139580
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Epilepsia
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ab715cd6690d1033e33f9f3f74192d0d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1167.2008.01728.x