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Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate safety, tolerability, seizure frequency, and regional variations in treatment responses with the AMPA antagonist, perampanel, in a large extension study during up to 3 years of treatment. METHODS: Patients ≥12 years old with partial-onset seizures despite treatment with 1–3 an...

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Autores principales: Krauss, Gregory L, Perucca, Emilio, Ben-Menachem, Elinor, Kwan, Patrick, Shih, Jerry J, Clément, Jean-François, Wang, Xuefeng, Bagul, Makarand, Gee, Michelle, Zhu, Jin, Squillacote, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4283992/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24867391
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.12643
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author Krauss, Gregory L
Perucca, Emilio
Ben-Menachem, Elinor
Kwan, Patrick
Shih, Jerry J
Clément, Jean-François
Wang, Xuefeng
Bagul, Makarand
Gee, Michelle
Zhu, Jin
Squillacote, David
author_facet Krauss, Gregory L
Perucca, Emilio
Ben-Menachem, Elinor
Kwan, Patrick
Shih, Jerry J
Clément, Jean-François
Wang, Xuefeng
Bagul, Makarand
Gee, Michelle
Zhu, Jin
Squillacote, David
author_sort Krauss, Gregory L
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To evaluate safety, tolerability, seizure frequency, and regional variations in treatment responses with the AMPA antagonist, perampanel, in a large extension study during up to 3 years of treatment. METHODS: Patients ≥12 years old with partial-onset seizures despite treatment with 1–3 antiepileptic drugs at baseline completed a perampanel phase III trial and entered extension study 307 (NCT00735397). Patients were titrated to 12 mg/day (or their individual maximum tolerated dose) during the blinded conversion period, followed by open-label maintenance. Exposure, safety (adverse events [AEs], vital signs, weight, electrocardiography [ECG], laboratory values) and seizure outcomes were analyzed; key measures were assessed by geographic regions. RESULTS: Among 1,216 patients, median exposure was 1.5 years (range 1 week to 3.3 years), with >300 patients treated for >2 years. Treatment retention was 58.5% at cutoff. AEs reported in ≥10% of patients were dizziness, somnolence, headache, fatigue, irritability, and weight increase. Only dizziness and irritability caused discontinuation in >1% of patients (3.9% and 1.3%, respectively). The only serious AEs reported in >1% of patients were epilepsy-related (convulsion, 3.0%; status epilepticus, 1.1%). No clinically relevant changes in vital signs, ECG or laboratory parameters were seen. After titration/conversion, responder rate and median percentage change from baseline in seizure frequency were stable: 46% for both measures at 9 months (in 980 patients with ≥9 months' exposure) and 58% and 60%, respectively, at 2 years (in the 337 patients with 2 years' exposure). Median percentage reduction in frequency of secondarily generalized (SG) seizures ranged from 77% at 9 months (N = 422) to 90% at 2 years (N = 141). Among the 694 patients with maintenance data ≥1 year, 5.3% were seizure-free for the entire year. SIGNIFICANCE: No new safety signals emerged during up to 3 years of perampanel exposure in 39 countries. Seizure responses remained stable, with marked reductions, particularly in SG seizures.
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spelling pubmed-42839922015-01-14 Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307 Krauss, Gregory L Perucca, Emilio Ben-Menachem, Elinor Kwan, Patrick Shih, Jerry J Clément, Jean-François Wang, Xuefeng Bagul, Makarand Gee, Michelle Zhu, Jin Squillacote, David Epilepsia Full-Length Original Research OBJECTIVE: To evaluate safety, tolerability, seizure frequency, and regional variations in treatment responses with the AMPA antagonist, perampanel, in a large extension study during up to 3 years of treatment. METHODS: Patients ≥12 years old with partial-onset seizures despite treatment with 1–3 antiepileptic drugs at baseline completed a perampanel phase III trial and entered extension study 307 (NCT00735397). Patients were titrated to 12 mg/day (or their individual maximum tolerated dose) during the blinded conversion period, followed by open-label maintenance. Exposure, safety (adverse events [AEs], vital signs, weight, electrocardiography [ECG], laboratory values) and seizure outcomes were analyzed; key measures were assessed by geographic regions. RESULTS: Among 1,216 patients, median exposure was 1.5 years (range 1 week to 3.3 years), with >300 patients treated for >2 years. Treatment retention was 58.5% at cutoff. AEs reported in ≥10% of patients were dizziness, somnolence, headache, fatigue, irritability, and weight increase. Only dizziness and irritability caused discontinuation in >1% of patients (3.9% and 1.3%, respectively). The only serious AEs reported in >1% of patients were epilepsy-related (convulsion, 3.0%; status epilepticus, 1.1%). No clinically relevant changes in vital signs, ECG or laboratory parameters were seen. After titration/conversion, responder rate and median percentage change from baseline in seizure frequency were stable: 46% for both measures at 9 months (in 980 patients with ≥9 months' exposure) and 58% and 60%, respectively, at 2 years (in the 337 patients with 2 years' exposure). Median percentage reduction in frequency of secondarily generalized (SG) seizures ranged from 77% at 9 months (N = 422) to 90% at 2 years (N = 141). Among the 694 patients with maintenance data ≥1 year, 5.3% were seizure-free for the entire year. SIGNIFICANCE: No new safety signals emerged during up to 3 years of perampanel exposure in 39 countries. Seizure responses remained stable, with marked reductions, particularly in SG seizures. BlackWell Publishing Ltd 2014-07 2014-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4283992/ /pubmed/24867391 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.12643 Text en © 2014 The Authors. Epilepsia published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Full-Length Original Research
Krauss, Gregory L
Perucca, Emilio
Ben-Menachem, Elinor
Kwan, Patrick
Shih, Jerry J
Clément, Jean-François
Wang, Xuefeng
Bagul, Makarand
Gee, Michelle
Zhu, Jin
Squillacote, David
Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307
title Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307
title_full Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307
title_fullStr Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307
title_full_unstemmed Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307
title_short Long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: Results from phase III extension study 307
title_sort long-term safety of perampanel and seizure outcomes in refractory partial-onset seizures and secondarily generalized seizures: results from phase iii extension study 307
topic Full-Length Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4283992/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24867391
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.12643
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