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Clinical Trial
. 2016 Nov:127:267-275.
doi: 10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2016.08.032. Epub 2016 Sep 1.

Efficacy and safety of adjunctive lacosamide for the treatment of partial-onset seizures in Chinese and Japanese adults: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Efficacy and safety of adjunctive lacosamide for the treatment of partial-onset seizures in Chinese and Japanese adults: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study

Zhen Hong et al. Epilepsy Res. 2016 Nov.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of adjunctive lacosamide treatment in Chinese and Japanese adults with uncontrolled focal (partial-onset) seizures (POS), with or without secondary generalization.

Methods: A 24-week, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study (EP0008; NCT01710657) was conducted in patients (aged 16-70 years) with uncontrolled POS and taking 1-3 concomitant antiepileptic drugs from 72 sites across China and Japan. Following an 8-week Baseline period, randomized patients received lacosamide 200mg/day (100mg twice daily), 400mg/day (200mg twice daily), or placebo for 4-week Titration and 12-week Maintenance periods. The primary efficacy variable was the change in POS frequency per 28days from Baseline to Maintenance.

Results: Overall, 692 patients were screened; 548 were randomized to placebo (n=184), lacosamide 200mg/day (n=183), or lacosamide 400mg/day (n=181); 485 (88.5%) completed the study. The median change (range) in POS frequency per 28days from Baseline to Maintenance was -3.33 (-754.3 to 165.2), -4.50 (-97.5 to 28.2), and -1.22 (-93.0 to 39.8) in the lacosamide 200mg/day, 400mg/day, and placebo groups, respectively. Significant percentage reductions in POS frequency over placebo per 28days from Baseline to Maintenance were observed for lacosamide 200mg/day (29.4% [95% CI 18.7-38.7%], p<0.001) and 400mg/day (39.6% [30.5-47.6%], p<0.001). Higher ≥50% and ≥75% responder and seizure freedom rates were observed in lacosamide-treated patients vs placebo. Treatment-emergent adverse events reported by ≥10% of all lacosamide-treated patients occurring at ≥2% difference compared with placebo were dizziness (25.9% vs 9.2%) and somnolence (10.2% vs 3.8%). Dose-proportional pharmacokinetics were consistent with earlier global pivotal trials.

Conclusions: Adjunctive lacosamide (200 and 400mg/day) was efficacious in reducing POS frequency in Chinese and Japanese patients with a safety and tolerability profile consistent with the three global pivotal studies.

Keywords: Antiepileptic drugs; Epilepsy; Focal seizure; Lacosamide; Tolerability.

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