1 / 43

Cognitive Issues in the Treatment of Epilepsy

Cognitive Issues in the Treatment of Epilepsy. Kimford Meador, MD Departments of Neurology & Pediatrics Emory University Atlanta, Georgia. kimford.meador@emory.edu. International Bureau for Epilepsy: 2004 Cognitive Function Survey. 44% Difficulty learning

hedva
Download Presentation

Cognitive Issues in the Treatment of Epilepsy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cognitive Issues in the Treatment of Epilepsy Kimford Meador, MD Departments of Neurology & Pediatrics Emory University Atlanta, Georgia kimford.meador@emory.edu

  2. International Bureau for Epilepsy: 2004 Cognitive Function Survey • 44% Difficulty learning • 45% Felt that they were slow thinkers • 59% Felt sleepy or tired • 63% AED effects prevented them from achieving activities or goals N = 425 Europeans with epilepsy www.ibe-epilepsy.org/whatsnew_det.asp

  3. Factors Affecting Cognition and Behavior in Epilepsy Seizure-RelatedVariables Treatment-Related Variables Non–Seizure-RelatedVariables

  4. Patient with Complex Partial Seizure from Left Mesial Temporal Sclerosis Lee KH et al, Neurology 2002;24:59(6):841-6

  5. Longitudinal Study of Hippocampal Atrophy • 12 unilateral TLE patients • Repeat MRI: mean 3.4 yrs (2.5-5.2yrs) • Progressive hippocampal atrophy occurred only in patients with continuing seizures • Mean 10% loss of hippocampal volume in patients with continued seizures TLE = temporal lobe epilepsy Fuerst D et al. Ann Neurol. 2003;53:413-416

  6. Cross-Sectional Cognition Study in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) • FSIQ of WAIS-R in 209 patients with unilateral TLE. • IQ lower if >30 year Seizure Duration than 15 - 30 years and <15 years. • IQ for 15 - 30 years and <15 years seizure duration did not differ. • Decline is in patients without seizure control. Jokeit H et al. J NeurolNeurosurg Psychiatry 1999;67:44-50

  7. Cognitive EffectsWineAEDs • Higher Dose/ABL • Polytherapy • Rapid Titration • Habituation • AED differences • Individual differences AEDs = antiepileptic drugs

  8. Cognitive Abilities Most Likely to be Affected by AEDs • Processing Speed (e.g., reaction time) • Complex or Sustained Attention • Dual Processing • Verbal learning • Paragraphs more sensitive than word lists • Verbal fluency • Rate at which words beginning with a specific letter can be generated AEDs = antiepileptic drugs

  9. Cognitive Effects of Older AEDs in Healthy Adults • Carbamazepine (CBZ), phenytoin (PHT), or valproate (VPA) rarely differ. • Phenobarbital significantly worse on about 1/3rd of tests than PHT or VPA. • Patients statistically better on placebo than older AEDs for about 50% of tests. Meador KJ et al. Neurology. 1991;41(10): 1537-1540; Meador KJ et al. Epilepsia. 1993;34(1):153-157; Meador KJ et al. Neurology. 1995;45(8):1494-1499.

  10. Healthy Volunteers: Newer AEDs vs Placebo Kalviainen et al, Epi Res 1996;25:291-7. Dodrill et al, Neurology 1997;48:1025-31. Leach et al, JNNP 1997;62:372-6. Meador et al., Epilepsia1999;40(9):1279-1285. Meador et al., Neurology 2001;56:1177-82. Salinsky et al., Epilepsy & Behavior 2004;5:894-902. Aldenkamp et al., Epilepsia 2000;41:1167-7. Meador et al., Neurology 2003;13;60:1483-8. Salinsky et al., Neurology 2005;64:792-8. Meador et al., Neurology 2005;64(12):2108-2115. Blum et al., Neurology 2006;67:400-406.

  11. Healthy Volunteers: Newer AEDs vs Other AEDs Meador et al., Epilepsia1999;40(9):1279-1285. Meador et al., Neurology 2001;56:1177-82. Salinsky et al., Epilepsy & Behavior 2004;5:894-902. Meador et al., Neurology 2003;13;60:1483-8. Salinsky et al., Neurology 2005;64:792-8. Meador et al., Neurology 2005;64(12):2108-2115.

  12. Incidence of Unprovoked Seizures in Developed Countries Cloyd et al. Epilepsy Res 2006;68 (Suppl 1): 39-48

  13. Cognitive Effects ofAEDs in the Elderly • Phenytoin = Valproate Craig & Tallis, Epilepsia 1994;35:381-390 • Elderly more sensitive to cognitive effects of AEDs: Carbamazepine, Phenobarb, Phenytoin, Primidone VA Cooperative Study

  14. VA Coop Geriatric Epilepsy Study N = 593 >65 y/o New onset epilepsy Mean Dose (mg/d) ABL (mcg/ml) CBZ = 558 6.8 GBP = 1424 8.7 LTG = 152 3.5 LTG GBP CBZ Rowan et al, Neurology 2005;64:1868-73. CBZ=carbamazepine, GBP=gabapentin, LTG=lamotrigine

  15. Cognitive Effects of AEDs in Children • Loring & Meador, Neurology 2004;62:872-7 • Pressler et al., Neurology 2006;66(10):1495-9. • Donati et al, Neurology 2006;67:679-682.

  16. Children AED Cognition Studies CBZ=carbamazepine, GBP=gabapentin, LEV=levetiracetam, LTG=lamotrigine, OXC=oxcarbazepine, PB=phenobarb, PHT=phenytoin, TPM=topiramate

  17. MCG Stories: Delayed Recall % Compared to Non-Drug AverageHealthy Volunteer Studies CBZ=carbamazepine, GBP=gabapentin, LTG=lamotrigine, PHT=phenytoin, TPM=topiramate. Meador et al, 1991, 1993, 2000, 2001, 2005

  18. In Utero AEDs & Behavioral Neurodevelopment in Animals • Phenobarb reduces brain weight & impairs behavior in mice. • Phenytoin impairs coordination & learning in rats. • Phenytoin can cause hyperactivity in monkeys. • Neurobehavioral effects also found for valproate.

  19. Neurodevelopment in Children of Women with Epilepsy • Maternal seizure type • # of seizures during pregnancy • IQ & education of parents • AEDs & other drugs • Other environmental factors

  20. Factors Affecting Cognitive Neurodevelopment • When maternal IQ is controlled, no other single environment factor has a large effect. • Heritability: 30-50% of IQ variance Sattler JM, 1992

  21. Cognitive Effects of In Utero AEDs • PHENOBARBITAL • 2 retrospective Danish cohorts without maternal IQ (n=114 PB total): PB vs. general population: -7 VIQ1 • PHENYTOIN • Prospective without maternal IQ (n=20 PHT): PHT vs. controls: -8 IQ2 • Prospective cohort (n=34 PHT, 36 CBZ): PHT not different when analyses using maternal IQ; also no effect for CBZ 3 • Swedish (?prospective) cohort without maternal IQ (n= 67 PHT): PHT vs. unexposed controls: -8 IQ4 1. Reinisch et al. JAMA 1995;274:1518-1525. 2. Vanderloop et al. Neurotox Terat 1992;14:196-92. 3. Scolnik et al, JAMA 1994;271:767-70. 4. Wide et al. Acta Paediatr 2002;409-14.

  22. Cognitive Effects of In Utero AEDs: • VALPROATE • 2 retrospective cohorts from UK, which controlled for maternal IQ): VPA vs. other monotherapy or no AED • Special education: 30% vs. 3-6%1 • VPA group 6-16 years old: -10-14 VIQ2 (n=41 VPA) • VPA group <6 years old: greater delay on SGS II (Schedule of Growing Skills II)1 (n=21 VPA) • Prospective Finnish cohort without maternal IQ): VPA vs. CBZ: -12 VIQ3 (n=13 VPA MonoTx) No difference for CBZ vs. unexposed3 1. Adab N, et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2001;70:15-21. 2. Adab N, et al. Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2004;75:1575-1583. 3. Gaily E, et al. Neurology. 2004;62:28-32.

  23. NEAD StudyNeurodevelopmental Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs 25 sites: USA & UK http://www.neadstudy.com Funded by NIH/NINDS #2RO1 NS 38455

  24. STUDY DESIGN • Multicenter prospective, parallel-group observational study with statistical control. • Pregnant mothers with epilepsy enrolled from late 1999 to early 2004. • AED monotherapy: • Carbamazepine (CBZ) • Lamotrigine (LTG) • Phenytoin (PHT) • Valproate (VPA) • Blinded cognitive assessments: 2, 3, 4.5, & 6 y/o • Primary outcome: IQ at 6 y/o

  25. Neurodevelopmental Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs Fetal valproate exposure related with lower IQ. CarbamazepineLamotriginePhenytoinValproate Mean IQ 98 101 99 92 Difference 6 9 7 (CIs) (0.6:12.0) (3.1:14.6) (0.2:14.0) 309 mother/child pairs from 25 centers in US & UK Meador et al. NEJM 2009;360:1597-605 Funded by NIH/NINDS #2RO1 NS 38455 and #1 R01050659

  26. Child IQ vs. Maternal IQ r = .23 p<.04 r = .54 p<.001 r = .49 p<.001 r = .09 NS Pearson correlations (p values) by AED Group from multiple imputation analyses for Child IQ vs. Maternal IQ

  27. Means (95% CIs) for Child IQ as Function of Dose and AED Group Median dosages: CBZ = 750 mg/day, LTG = 433 mg/day, PHT = 398 mg/day, and VPA = 1000 mg/day

  28. Valproate Dose Effects • NEAD Significant for both birth defects and IQ • 24.2% > 900 mg/day vs. 9.1% < 900 mg/day • North America Not significant • 1033 mg/day (+434) with malformations vs. 983 mg/day (+431) without • Australia Significant • 34.5% malformations > 1400 mg/day vs. 5.5% at < 1400 mg/day • Finland Significant • 23.8% for doses >1500mg/day vs. 9.5% for doses <1500mg/day • UK Not significant • 9.1% >1000 mg/day, 6.1% 600-1000 mg/day, 4.1% <600 mg/day • UK Liverpool Significant • Reduce VIQ 15 points > 1500mg/d, 9.9 at 801-1500mg/d, 2.2 < 800mg/d • Finland Significant • Reduce VIQ 20 points > 1500mg/d, 16.6 at 800-1500mg/d, 4.2 < 800mg/d • Sweden and GSK data Not analyzed for dose effect of VPA

  29. Cognitive Effects of Levetiracetam Fetal Exposure • Griffiths Mental Development Scale at age <24 mos • Developmental Quotient in Children of: • WWE on Levetiracetam (n=51): 100 • WWE on Valproate (n=44): 88 • Healthy women on drug (n=97): 99 • Weaknesses: • Young age at assessment • Retrospective collection of seizures and alcohol & tobacco use during pregnancy • Completer Rate: 58% LEV and 37% VPA Shallcrosset al, Neurology 2011

  30. Success with Antiepileptic Drugs Previously Untreated Epilepsy Patients (N=470) Not Sz Free Sz Free Kwan P, Brodie MJ. N Engl J Med. 2000;342(5):314-319

  31. Anterior Temporal Lobectomy (ATL) • 60-75% Seizure Free • <5% Morbidity • <1% Mortality • Average duration epilepsy 20 years prior to surgery

  32. Henry Gustav Molaison • Patient HM • Born: February 26, 1926 • Surgery: September 1, 1953 (age 27) • Died: December 2, 2008 (age 82) • Severe anterograde declarative memory disorder • Retrograde memory disorder back 11 years • Intact: immediate memory, procedural memory, priming, & release from proactive interference • Scoville WB, Milner B. Loss of recent memory after bilateral hippocampal lesions. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatr 1957;20:11-21.

  33. Neuropsychological Effects of Anterior Temporal Lobectomy • LEFT • Naming Deficits • Worsening of Verbal Episodic Memory • RIGHT • Non-Verbal Episodic Memory Deficits (less consistent & less clinically significance) Trenerry MR et al. Neurology 1993;43:1800-1805 Hermann BP et al. BehavNeurosci 1994;108:3-10 Helmstaedter C. Epilepsy & Behavior 2004;5:S45-S55.

  34. Predictors of Greater Risk for Post-ATL Cognitive Decline • ATL on language dominant side • Older age of seizure onset • Older age at surgery • Higher pre-op cognitive performance • No hippocampal atrophy/sclerosis • Poor post-op seizure control Helmstaedter C. Epilepsy & Behavior 2004;5:S45-S55. ATL= anterior temporal lobectomy

  35. Other Predictors of Post-ATL Cognitive Outcomes • Wada test • fMRI • MRS • PET • Evoked Potentials from implanted electrodes ATL= anterior temporal lobectomy

  36. Other Types of Epilepsy Surgery & Cognitive Risks • Frontal • Parietal • Occipital • Multiple Subpial Transections • Callosotomy • Hemispherectomy

  37. Vagal Nerve Stimulator • No cognitive side effects • Apparent improvements in some patients probably related to reduced seizures & Antiepileptic Drugs. Dodrill & Morris, Epilepsy Behav 2001;2:46-53

  38. Seizure-free Auras Seizures Hypertension/ Diabetes Heart Disease Comparison of Quality of Life With Seizures, HTN, Diabetes, & Heart Disease N = 166 61 58 55 T-SCORE 52 49 46 OverallQualityof Life EmotionalWell-Being SocialFunction Role–Emotional Energy/Fatigue Pain Role–Physical PhysicalFunction HealthPerception Vickrey BG. Epilepsia. 1994;35:597-607

  39. Relationship of Subtle AED Toxicity to Quality of Life QOLIE-89 Total Score QOLIE-89 Total Score Adverse Events Profile Summary Score Average Monthly Seizure Rate N = 200 r = -0.76,P<0.0001 Gilliam, et al. Neurology 2004;62:23-27

  40. Mood, Quality of Life, & Neuropsychological Function Subjective Mood Best All Objective Objective Test Tests Memory 17.2% 4.3% 7.9% Language 14.6% 4.9% 12.7% Attention 28.7% 3.6% 9.3% QOLIE-89 total 46.7% 5.2% 13.3% % Variance explained by each factor; N = 257 epilepsy patients Perrine et al, Arch Neurol 1995;52:997-1003

  41. Summary: Cognition & Epilepsy • Cognitive impairment in epilepsy is multifactorial. • Least cognitive effects: GBP, LEV, TGB, LTG. • Intermediate effects: CBZ, PHT, OXC, VPA. • Most adverse effects: PB, TPM, Benzos. • AED susceptibility can vary across patient groups as well as across individual patients. • Subjective and objective measures of cognitive function can dissociate. Benzos=benzodiazepines, CBZ=carbamazepine, GBP=gabapentin, LEV=levetiracetam, LTG=lamotrigine, PB=phenobarbital, PHT=phenytoin, OXC=oxcarbazepine, TGB=tiagabine, TPM=topiramate, VPA=valproate.

  42. Prevalence of Psychiatric Disorders in Epilepsy • Depression 11%–60% • Anxiety 19%–45% • Psychosis 2%–8% Anthony, et al. Epidemiol Rev 1995;17: 240-2 Weissman, et al. J Clin Psychopharm 1986; Suppl 6:11-17 Kessler, et al. Arch Gen Psych 1994;51:8-19

  43. Behavioral & Psychotropic Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs • Most of the AEDs can produce untoward subjective side effects • CBZ, LTG, & VPA have proven efficacy in bipolar disorder. • GBP & TPM used in add-on. • AEDs are used in variety psych. disorders (eg, VPA in agitation & GBP in social phobia) CBZ=carbamazepine, GBP=gabapentin, LTG=lamotrigine, TPM=topiramate, VPA=valproate.

More Related