Lacosamide: pharmacology, mechanisms of action and pooled efficacy and safety data in partial-onset seizures
- PMID: 19102666
- DOI: 10.1586/14737175.9.1.33
Lacosamide: pharmacology, mechanisms of action and pooled efficacy and safety data in partial-onset seizures
Abstract
Lacosamide is an antiepileptic drug approved in the USA and Europe as adjunctive therapy for partial-onset seizures. Studies suggest that lacosamide selectively enhances slow inactivation of voltage-gated sodium channels and possibly interacts with collapsin response mediator protein-2. The efficacy of lacosamide has been shown in animal models of epilepsy and Phase II/III clinical trials. Pharmacokinetic studies show that it is renally excreted, minimally bound to plasma proteins and has no known clinically relevant drug-drug interactions. Clinical trials show that lacosamide is well tolerated; the most common adverse events were dizziness, nausea and vomiting. In a Phase II/III pooled analysis, lacosamide 200 and 400 mg/day significantly reduced partial-onset seizure frequency and improved the 50% responder rate compared with placebo.
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