To evaluate changes in the pharmacokinetics of perampanel after discontinuation of carbamazepine. We enrolled 13 patients receiving perampanel who discontinued carbamazepine therapy between June 2016 and December 2018. Data on serum concentrations were obtained from the therapeutic drug monitoring database of the National Epilepsy Center (Shizuoka, Japan). To compare the pharmacokinetics of perampanel before and after discontinuation of carbamazepine, we determined the concentration/dose (CD) ratio of perampanel (serum level [ng/mL] divided by the dose [mg/kg]). The follow-up period was set to eight weeks following the discontinuation of carbamazepine therapy. The mean baseline CD ratio of perampanel was 1,247 ng/mL/mg/kg which increased markedly over time after discontinuation of carbamazepine, with a mean CD ratio at Weeks 1-2, Weeks 3-4, and Weeks 5-8 of 2,683, 3,914, and 4,220, respectively. At eight weeks, the mean CD ratio of perampanel had increased by 276%. Eleven patients developed adverse events, including dizziness, somnolence, irritability, and ataxia. Five of these 11 patients required perampanel dose reduction within eight weeks after discontinuation of carbamazepine. Two patients achieved seizure-free status at Weeks 5-8. The serum perampanel concentration began to increase from one week after discontinuation of carbamazepine, and continued to rise for eight weeks. Based on these findings, we recommend frequent monitoring of serum perampanel concentration for at least eight weeks after stopping carbamazepine therapy. Monitoring is required as a guide for dose adjustment in order to achieve a safe and effective therapeutic dose of perampanel.
Understanding consequences of poor chelation compliance is crucial given the enormous burden of post-transfusional iron overload complications. We systematically reviewed iron-chelation therapy (ICT) compliance, and the relationship between compliance with health outcome and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in thalassaemia patients. Several reviewers performed systematic search strategy of literature through PubMed, Scopus, and EBSCOhost. The preferred reporting items of systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed. Of 4917 studies, 20 publications were included. The ICT compliance rate ranges from 20.93 to 75.3%. It also varied per agent, ranging from 48.84 to 85.1% for desferioxamine, 87.2-92.2% for deferiprone and 90-100% for deferasirox. Majority of studies (N = 10/11, 90.91%) demonstrated significantly negative correlation between compliance and serum ferritin, while numerous studies revealed poor ICT compliance linked with increased risk of liver disease (N = 4/7, 57.14%) and cardiac disease (N = 6/8, 75%), endocrinologic morbidity (N = 4/5, 90%), and lower HRQoL (N = 4/6, 66.67%). Inadequate compliance to ICT therapy is common. Higher compliance is correlated with lower serum ferritin, lower risk of complications, and higher HRQoL. These findings should be interpreted with caution given the few numbers of evidence.
This post hoc analysis assessed the long-term safety, tolerability, and efficacy of perampanel in Asian patients with refractory focal seizures; an additional analysis assessed the effect of perampanel on focal impaired awareness seizures (FIAS) with focal to bilateral tonic-clonic (FBTC) seizures. In this subanalysis, data from Asian patients ≥12 years of age who had focal seizures with FBTC seizures despite taking one to 3 concomitant antiepileptic drugs at baseline, and who had entered either the long-term extension phase of 3 phase-3 perampanel trials (study 307) or the 10-week extension phase of study 335, were analyzed for the effect of perampanel on duration of exposure, safety, and seizure outcomes. Of 874 Asian patients included in the analysis, 205 had previously received placebo during the double-blind phase-3 trials and 669 had previously received perampanel 2-12 mg/day; 313 had FIAS with FBTC seizures at core study baseline. The median duration of exposure to perampanel was 385.0 days, and the retention rate at one year was 62.6%. Overall, during the first 52 weeks of perampanel treatment, 777 patients (88.9%) had treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs), most of which were mild to moderate in severity. The most frequent TEAEs were dizziness (47.1%), somnolence (22.3%), and nasopharyngitis (17.4%). During the first 52 weeks of perampanel treatment, median percent change in seizure frequency per 28 days from pre-perampanel baseline for all focal seizures was -28.1%, and -51.7% for FIAS with FBTC seizures. The 50% responder rate relative to pre-perampanel baseline for all focal seizures was 33.8%, and 51.1% for FIAS with FBTC seizures. Long-term treatment with perampanel in Asian patients had safety, tolerability, and efficacy similar to that of the global population in the phase-3 trials and extension study 307. The safety profile and response rate suggest benefit for an Asian population of patients with refractory epilepsy.