Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Multicenter, Comparative, Randomized, Open Trial to Evaluate Efficacy and Safety of Levetiracetam Versus Carbamazepine in Post Stroke Late Onset Crisis
The principal purpose of the study is to determine the efficacy and safety of Levetiracetam versus Carbamazepine, intended as the number of patients free from crisis during the whole period of treatment, in patients affected by post stroke late onset crisis.
Stroke is the most common cause of seizures in the elderly and seizures are among the most
common sequelae of stroke.
About 10% of patients experience seizures since stroke onset up to several years (Silverman
2002). Arbitrarly a cut point of 2 weeks divide early seizures from late seizures (Honey
2000, Olofson 2000, Berger 1989).Late occurrence of late seizure appears to carry a high
risk for epilepsy (Wilmore 1990).
The risk of epilepsy in some patients with a single stroke-related seizure is high enough to
justify starting an anticonvulsant therapy before a second seizure occurs(Labovitz 2003).
Levetiracetam (S-α-ethil-2-oxo-pyrrolidine acetamide) is S-enantiomer of a pyrrolidine
derivative and is unrelated to any other AED and has a unique preclinical and clinical
profile (Gower et al 1992).
Levetiracetam (LEV) binds with a stereospecific binding site in the CNS that is saturable
and reversible (Noyer 1995). This site actually known as LBS Levetiracetam Binding Site) is
unique and do not correspond to any known receptor or channel that might be involved in
neuroexcitability (Gillard 2003).
LEV selectively inhibits N-type Ca2 channels of CA1 pyramidal hyppocampal neurons (Lukyanetz
et a 2002) and, despite of not having any activity on GABA-gated currents, it shows a potent
ability to reverse the inhibitory effects of the negative allosteric modulators zinc and
β-carbolines on both GABAA and glycine receptor mediated responses(Rigo et al. 2002).
LEV has no effects on normal neurons (Birnstiel et al.1997) LEV as other AEDs has effect in
decreasing repetitive neuronal firing, but only LEV reduces the number of cells firing
synchronously (amplitude) of the evoked PS(Margineau and Klitgaard 2000).
The efficacy profile of the drug has been established through three pivotal randomized
double blind, placebo controlled, parallel studies on 904 patients suffering from partial
seizures secondarily or not generalised that were not well controlled by previous treatment
(Shorvon et al. 2000; Ben-Menachem et al. 2000; Cereghino et al. 2000).In these three
studies LEV showed a significant reduction of seizure frequency. A pooled analysis of the
results from these three studies supports a dose-response effect for levetiracetam:
responder rates were 28.5, 34.3 and 41.3 % for patients treated with levetiracetam 1000,
2000, 3000 mg/day respectively, as compared with 13.1% for placebo group. The respective
values for complete seizure freedom were 4.7, 6.3, 8.6 and 0.8%(Privitera 2002, Boon et al,
2002).
In a review of data for 1422 patients treated with levetiracetam, 38.6% of patients
experienced a ≥ 50% reduction in seizure frequency and 20% experienced a reduction of ≥ 75%.
The present study is not blinded because one of the purposes with the study has been to
mimic daily clinical practice as close as possible.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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