Author:
Kasteleijn- Nolst Trenite Dorothee G.A.,DiVentura Bree D.,Pollard John R.,Krauss Gregory L.,Mizne Sarah,French Jacqueline A.
Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the effect of cenobamate in patients with photoparoxysmal-EEG response (PPR) to intermittent photic stimulation (IPS) as proof of principle of efficacy in patients with epilepsy.MethodsIn this multicenter, single-blind study, adults with photosensitive epilepsy, with/without concomitant antiepileptic drug therapy, underwent IPS under 3 eye conditions after a single dose of placebo (day −1, day 2) or cenobamate (day 1; 100, 250, or 400 mg). Complete suppression was a standardized photosensitivity range reduction to 0 over ≥1 time points for all eye conditions. Partial suppression was a ≥3-point reduction over ≥3 testing times vs the same time points on day −1 in ≥1 eye condition. Pharmacokinetics and safety were assessed.ResultsOf 6 evaluable patients, 5 reentered to receive higher doses. Cenobamate 100 mg produced partial suppression in 1 of 3 patients; 250 mg produced complete suppression in 1 of 4 and partial suppression in 4 of 4 patients; and 400 mg produced complete suppression in 1 of 4 and partial suppression in 2 of 4 patients. PPR was consistently reduced on days 1 and 2 (>24 hours after cenobamate) vs day −1 (placebo) with the 250- and 400-mg doses. Area under the plasma concentration-time curve (before dose to last measurable concentration) values between 201 and 400 μg/h/mL resulted in partial suppression in 4 of 6 (66%) patients. Most common adverse events were dizziness and somnolence.ConclusionsThis proof-of-principle study demonstrated that cenobamate is a potentially effective product for epilepsy.ClinicalTrials.gov identifierNCT00616148.Classification of evidenceThis study provides Class III evidence that, for patients with photosensitive epilepsy, cenobamate suppresses IPS-induced PPR.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
39 articles.
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