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Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin

Many brain insults and injuries are “epileptogenic”: they increase the risk of developing epilepsy. It is desirable to identify treatments that are “antiepileptogenic”: treatments that prevent the development of epilepsy, if administered after the occurrence of an epileptogenic insult. Current antie...

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Autores principales: Hufthy, Yousif, Bharadwaj, Mahima, Gupta, Shubhi, Hussain, Delwar, Joseph, Prince Josiah Sajanthan, Khan, Alizah, King, Jessica, Lahorgue, Pieter, Jayawardena, Ovin, Rostami‐Hochaghan, Danial, Smith, Chloe, Marson, Anthony, Mirza, Nasir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9541605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35582761
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.17303
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author Hufthy, Yousif
Bharadwaj, Mahima
Gupta, Shubhi
Hussain, Delwar
Joseph, Prince Josiah Sajanthan
Khan, Alizah
King, Jessica
Lahorgue, Pieter
Jayawardena, Ovin
Rostami‐Hochaghan, Danial
Smith, Chloe
Marson, Anthony
Mirza, Nasir
author_facet Hufthy, Yousif
Bharadwaj, Mahima
Gupta, Shubhi
Hussain, Delwar
Joseph, Prince Josiah Sajanthan
Khan, Alizah
King, Jessica
Lahorgue, Pieter
Jayawardena, Ovin
Rostami‐Hochaghan, Danial
Smith, Chloe
Marson, Anthony
Mirza, Nasir
author_sort Hufthy, Yousif
collection PubMed
description Many brain insults and injuries are “epileptogenic”: they increase the risk of developing epilepsy. It is desirable to identify treatments that are “antiepileptogenic”: treatments that prevent the development of epilepsy, if administered after the occurrence of an epileptogenic insult. Current antiepileptic drugs are not antiepileptogenic, but evidence of antiepileptogenic efficacy is accumulating for a growing number of other compounds. From among these candidate compounds, statins are deserving of particular attention because statins are reported to be antiepileptogenic in more published studies and in a wider range of brain insults than any other individual or class of compounds. Although many studies report the antiepileptogenic effect of statins, it is unclear how many studies provide evidence that statins exhibit the following two essential features of a clinically viable antiepileptogenic drug: the drug must exert an antiepileptogenic effect even if it is initiated after the epileptogenic brain insult has already occurred, and the antiepileptogenic effect must endure even after the drug has been discontinued. In the current work, we interrogate published preclinical and clinical studies, to determine if statins fulfill these essential requirements. There are eight different statins in clinical use. To enable the clinical use of one of these statins for antiepileptogenesis, its antiepileptogenic effect will have to be established through future time‐ and resource‐intensive clinical trials. Therefore, it is desirable to review the published literature to determine which of the statins emerges as the most promising candidate for antiepileptogenic therapy. Hence, in the current work, we also collate and analyze published data—clinical and pre‐clinical, direct and indirect—that help to answer the question: Which statin is the most promising candidate to take forward into an antiepileptogenesis clinical trial?
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spelling pubmed-95416052022-10-14 Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin Hufthy, Yousif Bharadwaj, Mahima Gupta, Shubhi Hussain, Delwar Joseph, Prince Josiah Sajanthan Khan, Alizah King, Jessica Lahorgue, Pieter Jayawardena, Ovin Rostami‐Hochaghan, Danial Smith, Chloe Marson, Anthony Mirza, Nasir Epilepsia Critical Review Many brain insults and injuries are “epileptogenic”: they increase the risk of developing epilepsy. It is desirable to identify treatments that are “antiepileptogenic”: treatments that prevent the development of epilepsy, if administered after the occurrence of an epileptogenic insult. Current antiepileptic drugs are not antiepileptogenic, but evidence of antiepileptogenic efficacy is accumulating for a growing number of other compounds. From among these candidate compounds, statins are deserving of particular attention because statins are reported to be antiepileptogenic in more published studies and in a wider range of brain insults than any other individual or class of compounds. Although many studies report the antiepileptogenic effect of statins, it is unclear how many studies provide evidence that statins exhibit the following two essential features of a clinically viable antiepileptogenic drug: the drug must exert an antiepileptogenic effect even if it is initiated after the epileptogenic brain insult has already occurred, and the antiepileptogenic effect must endure even after the drug has been discontinued. In the current work, we interrogate published preclinical and clinical studies, to determine if statins fulfill these essential requirements. There are eight different statins in clinical use. To enable the clinical use of one of these statins for antiepileptogenesis, its antiepileptogenic effect will have to be established through future time‐ and resource‐intensive clinical trials. Therefore, it is desirable to review the published literature to determine which of the statins emerges as the most promising candidate for antiepileptogenic therapy. Hence, in the current work, we also collate and analyze published data—clinical and pre‐clinical, direct and indirect—that help to answer the question: Which statin is the most promising candidate to take forward into an antiepileptogenesis clinical trial? John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-06-10 2022-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9541605/ /pubmed/35582761 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.17303 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Epilepsia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International League Against Epilepsy. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Critical Review
Hufthy, Yousif
Bharadwaj, Mahima
Gupta, Shubhi
Hussain, Delwar
Joseph, Prince Josiah Sajanthan
Khan, Alizah
King, Jessica
Lahorgue, Pieter
Jayawardena, Ovin
Rostami‐Hochaghan, Danial
Smith, Chloe
Marson, Anthony
Mirza, Nasir
Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin
title Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin
title_full Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin
title_fullStr Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin
title_full_unstemmed Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin
title_short Statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: Analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin
title_sort statins as antiepileptogenic drugs: analyzing the evidence and identifying the most promising statin
topic Critical Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9541605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35582761
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/epi.17303
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