Devinsky O, Patel AD, Thiele EA, Wong MH, Appleton R, Harden
CL, Greenwood S, Morrison G, Sommerville K; GWPCARE1 Part A Study Group.
Randomized, dose-ranging safety trial of cannabidiol in Dravet syndrome. Neurology.
2018 Apr 3;90(14):e1204-e1211.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the safety and preliminary pharmacokinetics of a
pharmaceutical formulation of purified cannabidiol (CBD) in children with
Dravet syndrome.
METHODS:
Patients aged 4-10 years were randomized 4:1 to CBD (5, 10,
or 20 mg/kg/d) or placebo taken twice daily. The double-blind trial comprised
4-week baseline, 3-week treatment (including titration), 10-day taper, and
4-week follow-up periods. Completers could continue in an open-label extension.
Multiple pharmacokinetic blood samples were taken on the first day of dosing
and at end of treatment for measurement of CBD, its metabolites 6-OH-CBD,
7-OH-CBD, and 7-COOH-CBD, and antiepileptic drugs (AEDs; clobazam and
metabolite N-desmethylclobazam [N-CLB], valproate, levetiracetam, topiramate, and
stiripentol). Safety assessments were clinical laboratory tests, physical
examinations, vital signs, ECGs, adverse events (AEs), seizure frequency, and
suicidality.
RESULTS:
Thirty-four patients were randomized (10, 8, and 9 to the 5,
10, and 20 mg/kg/d CBD groups, and 7 to placebo); 32 (94%) completed treatment.
Exposure to CBD and its metabolites was dose-proportional (AUC0-t). CBD did not
affect concomitant AED levels, apart from an increase in N-CLB (except in
patients taking stiripentol). The most common AEs on CBD were pyrexia,
somnolence, decreased appetite, sedation, vomiting, ataxia, and abnormal
behavior. Six patients taking CBD and valproate developed elevated
transaminases; none met criteria for drug-induced liver injury and all
recovered. No other clinically relevant safety signals were observed.
CONCLUSIONS:
Exposure to CBD and its metabolites increased proportionally
with dose. An interaction with N-CLB was observed, likely related to CBD
inhibition of cytochrome P450 subtype 2C19. CBD resulted in more AEs than
placebo but was generally well-tolerated.
CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE:
This study provides Class I evidence that for children with
Dravet syndrome, CBD resulted in more AEs than placebo but was generally
well-tolerated.
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