Gabapentin as Add‐on Therapy for Refractory Partial Epilepsy: Results of Five Placebo‐Controlled Trials
- 1 October 1994
- Vol. 35 (s5) , S74-S76
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1157.1994.tb05974.x
Abstract
Gabapentin (GBP, Neurontin), a new antiepileptic drug (AED) with a novel mechanism of action, exhibits low acute toxicity in mice, rats, and monkeys, and is not teratogenic. GBP pharmacokinetics are simple and predictable; GBP is eliminated by urinary excretion, is not protein-bound or metabolized, does not induce or inhibit hepatic enzymes, and does not interact with other AEDs. In five placebo-controlled, double-blind studies of GBP as add-on therapy, 307 patients with refractory partial seizures received placebo and 485 received GBP dosages of 600, 900, 1,200, or 1,800 mg/day for 12 weeks following a 12-week baseline. Seizure frequency, as measured by response ratio and responder rate, was improved for patients receiving GBP compared with placebo; differences were statistically significant in two of the three large, multicenter studies. Adverse events occurred in 76% of GBP-treated patients, compared with 57% of placebo-treated patients. No serious adverse events were consistently attributable to GBP therapy. Changes in clinical laboratory values were not considered clinically important. GBP represents a significant addition to the armamentarium of AEDs available for treatment of patients with epilepsy.Keywords
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