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Failure to use new breakthrough treatments for epilepsy
Authors:Pavel Klein  Gregory L. Krauss  Bernhard J. Steinhoff  Orrin Devinsky  Michael R. Sperling
Affiliation:1. Mid-Atlantic Epilepsy and Sleep Center, Bethesda, Maryland, USA;2. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, Baltimore, Maryland, USA;3. Epilepsiezentrum Kork, Kehl-Kork, Germany and Medical Faculty, Albert-Ludwigs University, Freiburg, Germany;4. NYU Langone School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, New York, New York, USA;5. Thomas Jefferson University, Department of Neurology, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract:Despite the approval of ~20 additional antiseizure medications (ASMs) since the 1980s, one-third of epilepsy patients experience seizures despite therapy. Drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) is associated with cognitive and psychiatric comorbidities, socioeconomic impairment, injuries, and a 9.3–13.4 times higher mortality rate than in seizure-free patients. Improved seizure control can reduce morbidity and mortality. Two new ASMs were launched in the United States in 2020: cenobamate for focal epilepsy in adults and fenfluramine for Dravet syndrome (DS). They offer markedly improved efficacy. Cenobamate achieved 21% seizure freedom with the highest dose and decreased tonic–clonic seizures by 93% during maintenance treatment in a randomized clinical trial (RCT). In long-term, open-label studies, 10%–36% of patients were seizure-free for a median duration of ~30–45 months. Fenfluramine treatment in DS reduced convulsive seizure frequency by 56% over placebo at the highest dose, with 8% of patients free of convulsive seizures, and 25% with only one convulsive seizure over 14 weeks. These results were sustained for up to 3 years in open-label extension studies. Mortality was reduced 5-fold. These results are superior to all other approved ASMs, placing these two drugs among the most effective antiseizure therapies. The adverse event profiles resemble those of other ASMs. Despite greater efficacy and similar toxicity, these medications are infrequently used. Two years after US market entry, < 5% of either adults with focal DRE or patients with DS were treated with either cenobamate or fenfluramine. We believe this is a failure of our medical system, resulting from limited knowledge about these drugs stemming partly from the separation of academia from industry; restrictions to access created by health care payors, hospitals, and regulatory agencies; and insufficient post-launch information about the efficacy and safety of these ASMs.
Keywords:antiepileptic drug  antiseizure medication  cenobamate  drug resistant  epilepsy  fenfluramine
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