Szaflarski JP, Bebin EM, Comi AM, Patel AD, Joshi C,
Checketts D, Beal JC, Laux LC, De Boer LM, Wong MH, Lopez M, Devinsky O, Lyons PD,
Zentil PP, Wechsler R; CBD EAP study group. Long-term safety and treatment
effects of cannabidiol in children and adults with treatment-resistant epilepsies:
Expanded access program results. Epilepsia. 2018 Jul 12. doi: 10.1111/epi.14477.
[Epub ahead of print]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
Since 2014, cannabidiol (CBD) has been administered to
patients with treatment-resistant epilepsies (TREs) in an ongoing
expanded-access program (EAP). We report interim results on the safety and
efficacy of CBD in EAP patients treated through December 2016.
METHODS:
Twenty-five US-based EAP sites enrolling patients with TRE
taking stable doses of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) at baseline were included.
During the 4-week baseline period, parents/caregivers kept diaries of all
countable seizure types. Patients received oral CBD starting at 2-10 mg/kg/d,
titrated to a maximum dose of 25-50 mg/kg/d. Patient visits were every 2-4
weeks through 16 weeks and every 2-12 weeks thereafter. Efficacy endpoints
included the percentage change from baseline in median monthly convulsive and
total seizure frequency, and percentage of patients with ≥50%, ≥75%, and 100%
reductions in seizures vs baseline. Data were analyzed descriptively for the
efficacy analysis set and using the last-observation-carried-forward method to
account for missing data. Adverse events (AEs) were documented at each visit.
RESULTS:
Of 607 patients in the safety dataset, 146 (24%) withdrew;
the most common reasons were lack of efficacy (89 [15%]) and AEs (32 [5%]).
Mean age was 13 years (range, 0.4-62). Median number of concomitant AEDs was 3
(range, 0-10). Median CBD dose was 25 mg/kg/d; median treatment duration was 48
weeks. Add-on CBD reduced median monthly convulsive seizures by 51% and total
seizures by 48% at 12 weeks; reductions were similar through 96 weeks.
Proportion of patients with ≥50%, ≥75%, and 100% reductions in convulsive
seizures were 52%, 31%, and 11%, respectively, at 12 weeks, with similar rates
through 96 weeks. CBD was generally well tolerated; most common AEs were
diarrhea (29%) and somnolence (22%).
SIGNIFICANCE:
Results from this ongoing EAP support previous observational
and clinical trial data showing that add-on CBD may be an efficacious long-term
treatment option for TRE.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/journal-summaries/cannabidiol-efficacy-expanded-access-program-seizures/2018/07/18/7528366?spec=neurology
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