Epilepsia Open (Sep 2023)

Prescribed antiseizure medication doses and their relation to defined daily doses for achieving seizure freedom in newly diagnosed patients with epilepsy

  • Hire Hersi,
  • Jani Raitanen,
  • Jukka T. Saarinen,
  • Jukka Peltola

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/epi4.12737
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
pp. 811 – 819

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives To investigate the antiseizure medication (ASM) doses required to achieve seizure freedom and their correlation with the World Health Organization's defined daily doses (DDDs) in patients aged 16 years or older with newly diagnosed epilepsy. Methods The study included 459 patients with a validated diagnosis of new‐onset epilepsy. Patient records were retrospectively analyzed to determine the ASM doses in patients with or without seizure freedom during follow‐up. The DDD of the relevant ASM was then retrieved. Results The seizure‐freedom rate with first and subsequent ASMs was 88% (404/459 patients) during the follow‐up. The mean prescribed doses (PDDs) and PDD/DDD ratio of the most commonly used ASMs, ie, oxcarbazepine (OXC), carbamazepine (CBZ), and valproic acid (VPA), differed significantly between seizure‐free and non‐seizure‐free status (992 mg and 0.99 vs 1132 mg and 1.13; 547 mg and 0.55 vs 659 mg and 0.66; and 953 mg and 0.64 vs 1260 mg and 0.84, respectively). The effect of the OXC dose as the first failed ASM on the possibility of achieving seizure freedom was significant (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.002). Thirty‐four of 43 patients (79%) in which an OXC dose of ≤900 mg failed became seizure‐free, as compared with 24 of 54 patients (44%) with a failed OXC dose >900 mg. Significance The present study provides new insights into the doses of the commonly used ASMs such as OXC, CBZ, and VPA that can lead to seizure freedom as monotherapy or as combination therapy. The higher PDD/DDD ratio of OXC (0.99) than that of CBZ or VPA renders a generalized PDD/DDD comparison highly problematic.

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