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3/3/2014 TheBehavioral Effectsof AntiepilepticDrugs Jim Thigpen, PharmD, BCPS Assistant Professor, Department of Pharmacy Practice ETSU Bill Gatton College of Pharmacy Disclosure Statement of Financial Interest • I, Jim Thigpen DO NOT have a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with one or more organizations that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest in the context of the subject of this presentation. Notanewissue • In May, 1978, an article was published in Pediatrics describing a study of 109 children treated with phenobarbital as a prophylaxis against febrile seizures • 42% of the children developed “hyperactivity” • 54% of those had the medication stopped prematurely • Behavior was not correlated to elevated serum levels Wolf SW, Forsyth A. Pediatrics 1978;61:728‐731. 1 3/3/2014 Really,averyold issue • Triple bromides, the first antiepileptic drug of the modern era (introduced in 1857), was associated with “bromism”, a dose‐dependent psychiatric side effect that included disinhibition, irritability or emotional lability, depression, psychotic behavior, hallucinations, and violence Glauser TA. Epilepsy & Behavior 2004;5:S25‐S32. LearningOutcomes • Describe the reported behavioral effects caused by antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) • Discuss the proposed causes of these behavioral effects of the AEDs • Discuss the importance of communicating these behavioral effects to patients and caregivers Notaneasytask • Determining the actual incidence of AED psychiatric and behavioral side effects is complicated • Methodological difficulties between studies make comparison complicated • The era in which the drug was approved • Phenobarbital vs carbamazepine vs vigabatrin • Clinical trial data for monotherapy vs adjunctive therapy • Patient selection bias • Data analysis is frequently qualitative • Type I and type II errors can occur • Behavior may be related to the disease, not the meds Glauser TA. Epilepsy & Behavior 2004;5:S25‐S32. 2 3/3/2014 VarioususesofAEDs • Epilepsy • Pain syndromes • Weight loss • Psychiatric conditions AEDsandEpilepsy • Older medications are cheaper and come with long‐term experience, but can exhibit greater toxicity • Newer drugs are overall better tolerated but still have side effects, often behavioral • Expected ADEs (somnolence, nausea and dizziness) are well communicated to patients, BSEs are often overlooked • Effective treatment depends on medication adherence across a lifetime Eddy CM, Rickards HE, et al. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2012;32:362‐375. “AEDsandADEs” • All effective anticonvulsants produce unwanted effects • Toxicity • Nystagmus from toxic phenytoin levels • Side effects • Somnolence from phenobarbital • Idiosyncratic reactions • Rash from lamotrigine 3 3/3/2014 PharmacologyofAEDs • Blockage of voltage‐gated Na+ and Ca2+ ion channels • Enhancement of gamma‐aminobutyric acid (GABA)‐ergic neurotransmission • Inhibition of glutamanergic neurotransmission • Modulation of synaptic vesicle proteins • Modulation of K+ ion channels • Modulation of carbonic anhydrase Pharmacology&Behavior • Sodium‐channel blockers • Delay recovery of the channels from their fast‐ inactivated state, limiting the burst firing of neurons • Increase the number of channels in their slow‐ inactivated state, decreasing their availability for propagation • Na+ transport and homeostasis likely influence mood and behavior Pharmacology&Behavior Sodium‐channel blockers Carbamazepine Ethotoin Phenytoin Primidone Lacosamide Lamotrigine Oxcarbazepine Topiramate Rufinamide Zonisamide Valproic acid Felbamate 4 3/3/2014 Pharmacology&Behavior • Calcium‐channel blockers • Inhibition of low voltage‐activated T‐type Ca2+ channels (implicated in absence seizures) • Inhibition of high voltage‐activated Ca2+ channels (L‐ R‐ , P/Q‐, and N‐types), involved in neurotransmitter release • Ca2+ homeostasis is important for mood and behavior • Genetic variations in L‐type (bipolar, depression, schizophrenia) • Some antidepressants inhibit Ca2+ channel activity Pharmacology&Behavior Calcium‐channel blockers Ethosuximide Valproic acid Lamotrigine Zonisamide Carbamazepine Felbamate Phenobarbital Gabapentin Lamotrigine Levetiracetam Oxcarbazepine Pregabalin Topiramate Zonisamide Phenytoin Pharmacology&Behavior • GABA‐ergic neurotransmission enhancement • Modulating GABAA receptors • Increasing GABA levels in synaptic cleft • GABA‐ergic synapse dysfunction may contribute to aggressive behavior and schizophrenia 5 3/3/2014 Pharmacology&Behavior GABA‐ergic Neurotransmission Phenobarbital/Primidone Clobazam Clonazepam Tiagabine Vigabatrin Valproic acid Felbamate Topiramate Lamotrigine Zonisamide Pharmacology&Behavior • Inhibition of inotropic glutamate receptors • Alpha‐amino‐3‐hydroxy‐5‐methyl‐4‐isoxazolepropionic acid/kainate antagonism • N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate inhibition • Aberrant regulation of glutamanergic synapses may contribute to schizophrenia and possibly mood disorders Pharmacology&Behavior Inhibition of glutamate receptors Phenobarbital Lamotrigine Topiramate Perampanel Carbamazepine Felbamate Valproic acid Lamotrigine Oxcarbazepine 6 3/3/2014 Otherpotentialreasons… • Forced normalization (a.k.a. alternative psychosis) • First described in 1953 when it was observed that EEG paradoxically normalized and seizure activity was inhibited during psychotic episodes • Forced normalization is most commonly associated with psychosis, but hypomania/mania, depression, and anxiety also have been described • Release phenomenon • AEDs may cause BSEs simply by suppressing seizure activity, allowing the undesired behavior to manifest • Drug interactions • an increase in side effects may lead to frustration and an increase in undesirable behavior (especially in disabled patients) Besag FMC. Expert Opin. Drug Saf. 2004;3(1):1‐8 Otherpotentialreasons… • Individual patient characteristics and individual susceptibility • Age • Epilepsy type • Learning disabilities • Comorbid psychiatric history • Dosage, titration rate Besag FMC. Expert Opin. Drug Saf. 2004;3(1):1‐8 Phenobarbital & Primidone (Mysoline®) • Discovered in 1911 and initially used as a hypnotic • Remains the most widely prescribed AED in the world • The last published RCT ceased patient recruitment in 1987 and was published in 1996 • An updated study would be useful • Phenobarbital’s reputation is that of an old drug that has too many side effects • Cognitive side effects, especially in young children • Hyperactivity is reported as high as 42% Kwan P, Brodie MJ. Epilepsia, 2004;45(9):1141‐1149. 7 3/3/2014 Phenytoin (Dilantin®) • Synthesized in 1908, discovered AED properties in 1938 • Very few behavioral effects • Can be used to treat aggressive behavior • Psychosis has been reported with toxic levels Kwan P, Brodie MJ. Epilepsia, 2004;45(9):1141‐1149. Ethotoin (Peganone®) • Initially marketed in 1957, patent bought from Abbott Labs in 2003, reintroduced to U.S. market • MOA same as phenytoin, not as effective overall • Lacks the cosmetic adverse effects of phenytoin • Very few behavioral effects Minck DR, Acuff‐Smith KD, et al. Teraology 1991;43(4):279‐93. Package Insert – Peganone, Recordati Rare Diseases, Lebanon, NJ. Valproic Acid (Depakene®, Depakote®) • Discovered in 1882 and until 1962, was used as a “metabolically inert” solvent for organic compounds • Anticonvulsant activity was discovered by accident • Hostility (12%), Personality change (11%), Hyperactivity (10%), attentional difficulties (7%) • Minor behavioral changes that typically do not persist • Can be used to treat aggressive behavior Lens RA, Elterman RD, et al. Pediatric Neurology 2009;41:101‐110 Glauser TA, Cnaan A, et al. N Engl J Med 2010;362:790‐9. 8 3/3/2014 Carbamazepine (Tegretol®) • Very well studied, yet mixed results • BAEs are infrequent compared to some AEDs • • • • • Aggression Irritability Depression Neurosis Psychosis • Behavioral issues are more likely to arise in a patient with underlying mental challenges • Carbamazepine is used to treat bipolar disorder and may improve symptoms in other psychiatric issues Friedman DL, Kastner T, et al. Am J Ment Retard 1992;96(5):541‐546 Oxcarbazepine (Trileptal®) • Very similar to carbamazepine in side effect profile • Is usually seen as a “mood‐leveling” drug Besag FMC. Expert Opin Drug Saf 2004;3(1):1‐8. Tiagabine (Gabitril®) • In a larger (292 patients) study, serious adverse effects were reported in 19 (8%) of patients, of which 12 (63%) were behavioral‐related. • Anxiety, labile mood, paranoia, hallucinations and “unspecified psychiatric effects” were reported • Eight out of 12 had a pre‐existing psychiatric or developmental delay Vossler DG, Morris GL et al. Epilepsy & Behavior 2013;28:211‐216 9 3/3/2014 Vigabatrin (Sabril®) • Well studied since 1990 (15 studies on BSEs) • Agitation, aggression, mood changes/depression, and irritability were most common, ranging from 7 – 23% • Psychosis was reported in 7%, also reported after improvement in seizure control (forced normalization) • Much higher incidence in patients with a prior history • Psychosis more often seen with a right‐sided EEG focus • Some patients reported an improvement in mood and adjustment Eddy CM, Rickards HE, et al. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2012;32:362‐375 Clobazam (Onfi®) • BAEs include severe aggressive outbursts, insomnia and depression (seen in children with epilepsy and developmental delay) • Younger children (mean age 6.4 years) report more aggressive agitation, self‐injurious behavior and hyperactivity (also seen more in children who were developmentally disabled) Eddy CM, Rickards HE, et al. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2012;32:362‐375 Levetiracetam (Keppra®) • Of 1393 patients who took LEV in all clinical trials, including placebo‐ controlled and open‐label trials, 25.4% experienced some affective symptoms • More often seen in patients being treated for generalized epilepsy • BAEs have been reported in up to 34% of children/adolescents • Irritability, aggression and hyperactivity are most common • Aggression can be severe in up to 27% of cases • 16% stopped taking the medication due to behavioral problems • BAEs also can occur in up to 25% of adults • 2/3 discontinue the drug due to BAEs • Aggression more often seen in elderly patients • Effects are more often seen in patients with poorer seizure control, learning disability, mental retardation, or previous behavioral problems Eddy CM, Rickards HE, et al. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2012;32:362‐375 10 3/3/2014 Topiramate (Topamax®) • Multiple mechanisms of action (Ca2+, Na+, GABA, carbonic anhydrase inhibition) • In one study of 431 patients, psychiatric adverse events occurred in 23.9% (affective disorder, psychosis, aggression, agitation, anxiety) • Psychosis reported as high as 12%, where it has been 0.8% in clinical trials • Affective disorder (10.7%), aggressive behavior (5.6%), anger/hostility and anxiety have also been reported • Some patients were reported to be seizure free just prior to symptom appearance • High starting dose and rapid titration schedule were more likely to lead to adverse events • Patient or family psychiatric history increases the likelihood • May be more likely in older adults Mula M, Trimble MR, et al. Epilepsia 2003;44(5):659‐663. Crawford P. Seizure 1998;7(3):207‐211 Khan A, Faught E, et al. Seizure 1999;8(4):235‐237 Zonisamide (Zonegran®) • Multiple mechanisms of action similar to topiramate • Does not cause cognitive side effects as much as topiramate • Agitation and irritability are more frequently reported • 9% reported in pooled data • 6% depression • 2% psychosis reported • Overall AED‐attributed BSEs nearly 10% • Treatment of bipolar disorder? • Mixed results Besag FMC. Expert Opin Drug Saf 2004;3(1):1‐8. Lamotrigine (Lamictal®) • • • • Hyperactivity in 7% Hostility in 7% Personality change in 6% Depression in 1% • Aggression, self‐injurious behaviors, violence, insomnia and hallucinations have been seen in case reports • Much more often seen in patients with learning disabilities • Behavior improvement • Positive effects on alertness, attention, and learning • Reduced lethargy and depression, improved social functioning Eddy CM, Rickards HE, et al. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2012;32:362‐375 Glauser TA, Cnaan A, et al. N Engl J Med 2010;362‐790‐9 11 3/3/2014 Gabapentin (Neurontin®) • In an unblinded study of 377 patients with partial epilepsy • Confusion/disorientation was seen in 15% • Anxiety/agitation 11% • History of ADHD may increase risk • Depression 10% • More often reported in LD patients • Case reports of aggression Marson AG, Al‐Kharusi et al. Lancet 2007;269:1000‐1015. Pinninti NR, Mahajan DS. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 2001;13(3):424. Tallain KB, Nahata MC, et al. Epilepsia 1996;37(suppl):501‐502 Pregabalin (Lyrica®) • Think pain, not epilepsy • Most often associated with dizziness, vertigo, incoordination, ataxia, tremor, diplopia, and blurred vision • Mainly dose‐related • Low incidence of euphoria (hence the C‐V status), confusion, fatigue, and attention disturbances Zaccara G, Gangemi P, et al. Epilepsia 2011;52(4):826‐836. Toth C. Expert Opin Drug Saf 2012;11(3):487‐502. Lacosamide (Vimpat®) • Most adverse reactions with lacosamide are dose‐related CNS effects (dizziness, ataxia, vomiting, diplopia, nausea, vertigo, and blurred vision) • Being investigated for use in diabetic neuropathy Marson AG, Al‐Kharusi et al. Lancet 2007;269:1000‐1015. Shaibani A, Biton V, et al. European J Pain 2009;13:458‐463. 12 3/3/2014 Felbamate (Felbatol®) • Case reports of psychosis and anxiety • Use is restricted due to aplastic anemia and severe hepatotoxicity • Compassionate use only Cavanna AE, Ali F, et al. Discov Med 2010;9(45):138‐44. Ethosuximide (Zarontin®) • Case reports of psychosis • Hyperactivity (9%), somnolence (9%), attention difficulties (4%), and hostility, personality change, depression (3%) Chien J. Epilepsy & Behavior 2011;21:483‐485. Glauser TA, Cnaan A, et al. N Engl J Med 2010;362:790‐9. Rufinamide (Banzel®) • A triazole derivative that is unrelated to all other AEDs • Indicated for refractory Lennox‐Gastaut syndrome • Efficacy in partial seizures • Side effects consist mainly of headache, dizziness, fatigue, somnolence and nausea Aneja S, Sharma S. Indian Pediatrics 2013;50:1033‐1040 Stafstrom CE. Neoropsych Dis Treatm 2009;5:547‐551. 13 3/3/2014 Perampenel (Fycompa®) • Just launched in January 2014 • Most well‐known for black box warning for severe psychiatric and behavioral reactions including • aggression & hostility seen in 8 – 20% • irritability & anger in 2% • homicidal ideation and threats in 0.1% • Adverse effects are dose‐related Serratosa JM, Villanueva V et al. Acta Neurol Scand 2013;127:30‐35. Fycompa® package insert. Eisai Inc. www.FYCOMPA.com Doyouhaveahistory? • A past psychiatric history is the most significant non‐AED predictor of BSEs, occurring in nearly 25% of patients compared to 12% of those without www.renewaldynamics.com Eddy CM, Rickards HE, et al. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2012;32:362‐375 Givemeashortlist • Absolutely discuss • • • • • • • Levetiracetam Topiramate Tiagabine Vigabatrin Clobazam Ethosuximide Perampanel • Worth mentioning • • • • • Phenobarbital Valproic acid Zonisamide Lamotrigine Gabapentin 14 3/3/2014 HighPoints • BAEs are difficult to pin down in clinical trials • Selection bias • Adjunctive drug • More common in patient population • Other potential causes • Forced normalization • Reduce the incidence by going low and slow • Essentially all drugs in the class can cause BAEs • Remember the short list • Very important to expect in a patient with a history 15