6533b857fe1ef96bd12b3bd9
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Adjunctive Brivaracetam in Older Patients with Focal Seizures: Evidence from the BRIVAracetam add‑on First Italian netwoRk Study (BRIVAFIRST).
1 Simona Lattanzi2 Michele Ascoli3 Laura CanafogliaMaria Paola Canevini 4 56 Sara Casciato7 Emanuele Cerulli Irelli4 Valentina Chiesa8 Filippo Dainese9 Giovanni De Maria Giuseppe Didato 106 Giancarlo Di Gennaro Giovanni Falcicchio 117 Martina Fanella Massimo Gangitano 12 Angela La Neve 117 Oriano Mecarelli Elisa Montalenti 137 Alessandra Morano Federico Piazza 14 Chiara Pizzanelli 157 Patrizia Pulitano Federica Ranzato 16 Eleonora Rosati 17 Laura Tassi 187 Carlo Di Bonaventura Brivafirst Group Collaborators Affiliations Collapse Collaborators Brivafirst Group: Angela AlicinoAssenza GiovanniAvorio FedericaBadioni ValeriaBanfi PaolaBartolini Emanuele Luca Manfredi BasiliBelcastro VincenzoBeretta SimoneBerto IreneBiggi MartinaBillo GiuseppeBoero GiovanniBonanni PaoloBongiorno JoleBrigo FrancescoCaggia EmanueleCagnetti ClaudiaCalvello CarmenCesnik EdwardChianale GigliolaCiampanelli DomenicoCiuffini RobertaCocito DarioColella DonatoContento MargeritaCosta CinziaCumbo EduardoD'aniello AlfredoDeleo FrancescoC Difrancesco Jacopo Roberta Di Giacomo Alessandra Di LibertoDomina ElisabettaDonato FrancescoDono FedeleDurante VaniaElia MaurizioEstraneo AnnaEvangelista Giacomo Maria Teresa FaeddaFailli YleniaFallica ElisaFattouch JinaneFerrari AlessandraFlorinda FerreriFisco GiacomoFonti DavideFortunato FrancescoFoschi NicolettaFrancavilla TeresaGalli RositaGasparini SaraGazzina Stefano Anna Teresa Giallonardo Filippo Sean GiorgiGiuliano LorettaHabetswallner FrancescoIzzi FrancescaBenedetta KassabianKiferle LorenzoLabate AngeloLuisi ConcettaMagliani MatteoMaira GiuliaMari LuisaMarino DanielaMascia AddolorataMazzeo AlessandraMeletti StefanoMilano ChiaraNilo AnnacarmenOrlando BiagioPaladin Francesco Maria Grazia PascarellaPastori ChiaraPauletto GiadaPeretti AlessiaPerri GabriellaPezzella MariannaPiccioli MartaPignatta PietroPilolli NicolaPisani Francesco Laura Rosa PisaniPlacidi FabioPollicino PatriziaPorcella VittoriaPuligheddu MonicaQuadri Stefano Pier Paolo QuaratoQuintas RuiRenna RosariaRum Adriana Enrico Michele SalamoneSavastano ErsiliaSessa MariaStokelj DavidTartara ElenaTombini MarioTumminelli Gemma Anna Elisabetta VaudanoViganò IlariaViglietta EmanuelaVignoli AglaiaVillani FlavioZambrelli ElenaZummo Leliasubject
Antiseizure medicationEpilepsySettore MED/26PyrrolidinonesFocal seizuresTreatment OutcomeDrug TherapyDouble-Blind MethodItalySeizuresBrivaracetamCombinationAntiseizure medication; Brivaracetam; Focal seizuresAged; Double-Blind Method; Drug Therapy Combination; Humans; Italy; Pyrrolidinones; Retrospective Studies; Seizures; Treatment Outcome; Anticonvulsants; EpilepsyHumansPharmacology (medical)Settore MED/26 - NeurologiaAnticonvulsantsDrug Therapy CombinationGeriatrics and GerontologyAgedRetrospective Studiesdescription
BACKGROUND: The management of epilepsy in older adults has become part of daily practice because of an aging population. Older patients with epilepsy represent a distinct and more vulnerable clinical group as compared with younger patients, and they are generally under-represented in randomized placebo-controlled trials. Real-world studies can therefore be a useful complement to characterize the drug's profile. Brivaracetam is a rationally developed compound characterized by high-affinity binding to synaptic vesicle protein 2A and approved as adjunctive therapy for focal seizures in adults with epilepsy. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the 12-month effectiveness and tolerability of adjunctive brivaracetam in older patients (≥65 years of age) with epilepsy treated in a real-world setting. METHODS: The BRIVAFIRST (BRIVAracetam add-on First Italian netwoRk STudy) was a 12-month retrospective multicenter study including adult patients prescribed adjunctive brivaracetam. Effectiveness outcomes included the rates of seizure response (≥50% reduction in baseline seizure frequency), seizure freedom, and treatment discontinuation. Safety and tolerability outcomes included the rate of treatment discontinuation due to adverse events and the incidence of adverse events. Data were compared for patients aged ≥65 years of age ('older') vs those aged <65 years ('younger'). RESULTS: There were 1029 patients with focal epilepsy included in the study, of whom 111 (10.8%) were aged ≥65 years. The median daily dose of brivaracetam at 3 months was 100 [interquartile range, 100-175] mg in the older group and 100 [100-200] mg in the younger group (p = 0.036); it was 150 [100-200] mg in both groups either at 6 months (p = 0.095) or 12 months (p = 0.140). At 12 months, 49 (44.1%) older and 334 (36.4%) younger patients had a reduction in their baseline seizure frequency by at least 50% (p = 0.110), and the seizure freedom rates were 35/111 (31.5%) and 134/918 (14.6%) in older and younger groups, respectively (p < 0.001). During the 1-year study period, 20 (18.0%) patients in the older group and 245 (26.7%) patients in the younger group discontinued brivaracetam (p = 0.048). Treatment withdrawal because of insufficient efficacy was less common in older than younger patients [older: n = 7 (6.3%), younger: n = 152 (16.6%); p = 0.005]. Adverse events were reported by 24.2% of older patients and 30.8% of younger patients (p = 0.185); the most common adverse events were somnolence, nervousness and/or agitation, vertigo, and fatigue in both study groups. CONCLUSIONS: Adjunctive brivaracetam was efficacious, had good tolerability, and no new or unexpected safety signals emerged when used to treat older patients with uncontrolled focal seizures in clinical practice. Adjunctive brivaracetam can be a suitable therapeutic option in this special population.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2022-04-01 | Drugsaging |