Grinspan ZM, Shellhaas RA, Coryell J, Sullivan JE, Wirrell
EC, Mytinger JR, Gaillard WD, Kossoff EH, Valencia I, Knupp KG, Wusthoff C,
Keator C, Ryan N, Loddenkemper T, Chu CJ, Novotny EJ Jr, Millichap J, Berg AT.
Comparative Effectiveness of Levetiracetam vs Phenobarbital for
Infantile Epilepsy. JAMA Pediatr. 2018 Feb 12. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2017.5211.
[Epub ahead of
print]
Abstract
IMPORTANCE:
More than half of infants with new-onset epilepsy have
electroencephalographic and clinical features that do not conform to known
electroclinical syndromes (ie, nonsyndromic epilepsy). Levetiracetam and
phenobarbital are the most commonly prescribed medications for epilepsy in
infants, but their comparative effectiveness is unknown.
OBJECTIVE:
To compare the effectiveness of levetiracetam vs
phenobarbital for nonsyndromic infantile epilepsy.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS:
The Early Life Epilepsy Study-a prospective, multicenter,
observational cohort study conducted from March 1, 2012, to April 30, 2015, in
17 US medical centers-enrolled infants with nonsyndromic epilepsy and a first
afebrile seizure between 1 month and 1 year of age.
EXPOSURES:
Use of levetiracetam or phenobarbital as initial monotherapy
within 1 year of the first seizure.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES:
The binary outcome was freedom from monotherapy failure at 6
months, defined as no second prescribed antiepileptic medication and freedom
from seizures beginning within 3 months of initiation of treatment. Outcomes
were adjusted for demographics, epilepsy characteristics, and neurologic
history, as well as for observable selection bias using propensity score weighting
and for within-center correlation using generalized estimating equations.
RESULTS:
Of the 155 infants in the study (81 girls and 74 boys;
median age, 4.7 months [interquartile range, 3.0-7.1 months]), those treated
with levetiracetam (n = 117) were older at the time of the first seizure than
those treated with phenobarbital (n = 38) (median age, 5.2 months
[interquartile range, 3.5-8.2 months] vs 3.0 months [interquartile range,
2.0-4.4 months]; P < .001). There were no other significant bivariate differences.
Infants treated with levetiracetam were free from monotherapy failure more
often than those treated with phenobarbital (47 [40.2%] vs 6 [15.8%]; P = .01).
The superiority of levetiracetam over phenobarbital persisted after adjusting
for covariates, observable selection bias, and within-center correlation (odds
ratio, 4.2; 95% CI, 1.1-16; number needed to treat, 3.5 [95% CI, 1.7-60]).
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE:
Levetiracetam may have superior effectiveness compared with
phenobarbital for initial monotherapy of nonsyndromic epilepsy in infants. If
100 infants who received phenobarbital were instead treated with levetiracetam,
44 would be free from monotherapy failure instead of 16 by the estimates in
this study. Randomized clinical trials are necessary to confirm these findings.
Courtesy of a colleague
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