Long-term observations on the clinical use of lamotrigine as add-on drug in patients with epilepsy

1994 
Abstract We report open-label clinical observations of additional lamotrigine (LTG) in 16 adult patients with refractory epilepsy, aimed to assess the long-term efficacy and safety of LTG in clinical use. LTG was added to the current antiepileptic drug (AED) regimen at a daily dosage of 200–400 mg depending on the concomitant treatment. Ten patients completed one year's treatment and were followed up to an overall exposure ranging 15–38 months. Six patients (38% of the initial group) had a reduction of seizure frequency greater than 50% of pre-treatment baseline after one year; the further follow-up indicated some efficacy decline, since the percentage of improved patients dropped to 19% after 2 years and 13% after 3 years. The dropouts during the first year were due to seizure breakthrough (two patients), Stevens-Johnson-like syndrome (one patient) and reasons unrelated to treatment (three patients); in one patient LTG treatment was stopped due to macrocytic anemia after 23 months. Other reported adverse events were dizziness, mild ataxia, diplopia and localized purpura. No other hematological or biochemical changes were noted. LTG was not associated with any significant changes in plasma concentrations of concomitant AEDs. These findings confirm the moderate efficacy and low toxicity of long-term LTG in severe epilepsy.
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