Standard Approach to Antiepileptic Drug Treatment in the United States
- 1 August 1994
- Vol. 35 (s4) , S11-S18
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1157.1994.tb05951.x
Abstract
Antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are administered to patients for acute and long-term treatment of seizures. Most patients with acute convulsions receive intravenous (i.v.) benzodiazepine (BZD), frequently followed by i.v. loading with phenytoin (PHT), especially when seizures continue. For patients with absence status epilepticus, BZD is usually followed by ethosuximide (ESM) or valproate (VPA). The decision to continue AED therapy is based on the likelihood that seizures will continue or recur. Once epilepsy is diagnosed, long-term treatment with AEDs is recommended, beginning with monotherapy. Two studies sponsored by the U.S. Veterans Administration (VA), which compared the efficacy of carbamazepine (CBZ), PHT, phenobarbital (PB), primidone (PRM), and VPA, recommend that most adults with recurrent partial seizures receive either CBZ or PHT. The 1992 VA study suggests that VPA is equal to CBZ or PHT in efficacy when partial seizures become secondarily generalized. Primary generalized epilepsies are most frequently treated with VPA when combinations of generalized seizures exist. ESM is prescribed most often when typical childhood absence seizures exist alone. Although many authorities do not recommend long-term treatment of childhood febrile seizures, PB is administered by some when febrile seizures have complex symptomatology. In general, AED monotherapy is currently preferred, but those with more refractory epilepsy receive polytherapy. CBZ, PHT, PB, PRM, VPA, and ESM are the primary AEDs prescribed in the United States. PHT, followed by CBZ and VPA, is the most frequently prescribed AED as both new and total prescriptions. The introduction of felbamate, gabapentin,and lamotrigine may alter these patterns in the future.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Treatment of convulsive status epilepticus. Recommendations of the Epilepsy Foundation of America's Working Group on Status EpilepticusPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1993
- Status Epilepticus in Children, Adults, and the ElderlyEpilepsia, 1992
- Management of febrile seizures: Survey of current practice and phenobarbital usagePediatric Neurology, 1991
- Valproate Toxicity: Risk-Screening StrategiesJournal of Child Neurology, 1991
- Risk-Benefit Assessment of Carbamazepine in ChildrenDrug Safety, 1991
- Results of a Nationwide Veterans Administration Cooperative Study Comparing the Efficacy and Toxicity of Carbamazepine, Phenobarbital, Phenytoin, and PrimidoneEpilepsia, 1987
- A Comparative Bioavailability Study of Carbamazepine Tablets and a Chewable Tablet FormulationTherapeutic Drug Monitoring, 1987
- Carbamazepine Drug InteractionsTherapeutic Drug Monitoring, 1986
- Recurrence risk after first febrile seizure and effect of short term diazepam prophylaxis.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1985
- Comparison of Carbamazepine, Phenobarbital, Phenytoin, and Primidone in Partial and Secondarily Generalized Tonic–Clonic SeizuresNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985