Epilepsy Clinical Trial
Official title:
An Open-label Pilot Study Using Carvedilol-CR as a P-glycoprotein Inhibitor as Adjunct Therapy in the Treatment of Medically-refractory Epilepsy
In up to 1 out of 3 patients with epilepsy, seizures continue to occur despite the use of
one or more antiepileptic medications. Patients also have significant problems with
side-effects of these medications as doses are increased.
Our body naturally generates miniature pumps located on the surfaces of many organs to get
rid of toxic substances, and antiepileptic medications can be considered by the cells of the
body to be a toxin. Research with epileptic brain regions have shown an increase in the
amount of drug pumps, therefore getting rid of antiepileptic drugs. One of these pumps is
called p-glycoprotein (P-gp for short). Medications may be unable to penetrate and stay
within the parts of the brain that need them them most. This may mean that the amount of
drug is actually lower in the parts of the brain that cause seizures, and higher in the rest
of the brain, which may be why patients may still feel side-effects when seizures are still
occurring.
Research in animals has shown that blocking the P-gp pumps can improve how bad, and how many
seizures occur as well as the length of seizures. Blockage of the pumps can be done using a
different type of medication. Some medications that are used for common problems have been
discovered to also block P-gp pumps. One of these, carvedilol, is used to treat heart
failure and high blood pressure. It has been found to be very safe in these patients, and
does not have a lot of side-effects. We plan to add this medication in addition to patient's
anti-seizure medications to see if it will improve epileptic seizures.
The reason why some patients have high amounts of P-gp pumps and others do not may be
related to their genetics. A simple blood test can be used to determine a person's potential
to produce high quantities of the pumps. This study will also attempt to show that the
genetics will affect how well the P-gp blocking will work.
The Center for Disease Control reports that epilepsy afflicts 2.7 million Americans with
annual costs of $15.5 billion. They estimate that 3% of Americans will have a diagnosis of
epilepsy by age 80, and decided in 1997 to focus on treatment, with a motto of "no seizures,
no side effects".
Antiepileptic drugs (AED) can fail, despite being structurally unrelated and acting on
different parts of the nervous system. This refractory state constitutes up to 35% of the
epilepsy population, and may be due to pharmacoresistance. Efflux transporters, such as
P-glycoprotein (Pgp), are present at the bloodbrain barrier and serve to pump out
structurally unrelated compounds, likely serving as a method for the removal of toxins (and
drugs). Upregulation of efflux transporters such as Pgp by tumor cells are thought to
contribute to chemotherapy resistant cancer tumors, but Pgp has also been found focally at
seizure foci. Its overexpression was also noted in blood vessel endothelial cells following
temporal lobe resection for intractable epilepsy. Case series have shown mRNA for MDR1, the
gene encoding Pgp, to be 10x greater in the medial temporal lobes of patients with temporal
lobe epilepsy, as compared to those without epilepsy. Pathological examination following
surgical resections have found that epilepsy causing lesions such as cortical dysplasias,
encephalitis, tuberculous leptomeningitis, tuberous sclerosis and astrocytomas express Pgp
in neurons and/or glia, whereas normal brain parenchyma does not. In animal and cell
research, upregulation has been seen following seizure induction and status epilepticus.
Many AEDs are validated substrates to Pgp in animal studies. Delivery of these medications
to the brain is likely associated with Pgp and in some cases, presence of the substrate may
upregulate Pgp.
When Pgp inhibitors were added to animal models of drug resistant epilepsy, there were
significant improvements in seizure frequency, duration and severity, providing
proof-of-concept at the animal level. Carvedilol and verapamil, among other medications,
have been found to be potent Pgp inhibitors. Verapamil and dexverapamil, either oral or
intravenous, has been used as Pgp-inhibitors in clinical trials, with success as an adjuvant
in malignant lymphoma and a phase III study as an adjunct in chemorefractory, metastatic
breast carcinoma. There have been no clinical trials published using Pgp-inhibition in
epilepsy.
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Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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