Last Updated: 2003-05-30 11:00:26 -0400 (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - New research suggests that people with epilepsy
who receive an anti-seizure drug may be more likely to experience certain side
effects than patients with anxiety and dementia who are sometimes treated with
the same medication.
The investigators found that, among people who received the drug
levetiracetam (Keppra), feelings of depression, hostility, anxiety and
nervousness appeared more commonly in people with epilepsy than in people with
dementia or anxiety.
This finding "suggests that people with epilepsy have a higher rate of side
effects than patients with disorders that you would expect to have these
problems," study author Joyce A. Cramer of Yale University in Connecticut told
Reuters Health.
Cramer noted that research suggests other anti-epilepsy drugs besides
levetiracetam can also produce similar side effects in people with epilepsy.
She cautioned, however, that the rate of anxiety, depression and other
similar side effects was very low, even in epileptics. Furthermore, for anyone
who experiences these side effects, their doctor can often change the dose or
tell them to stop taking the drug, she noted.
She said that any doctor who treats a patient with epilepsy is likely very
careful, and probably needs to take no extra precautions when prescribing
anti-seizure drugs to a patient with epilepsy than when offering the medications
to other patients.
"What the data showed is that these things are very rare," Cramer said in an
interview.
"I think the vast, vast majority of (epileptics) have no trouble starting any
drug," Cramer said.
To obtain their findings, Cramer and her colleagues reviewed past studies
that compared the effects of levetiracetam to a placebo in patients with
epilepsy, anxiety and cognitive disorders -- primarily, dementia.
The current report, published in the journal Epilepsy and Behavior, includes
information collected from 2,416 epilepsy patients, 1,510 people with an anxiety
disorder and 719 people with cognitive disorders.
Pooling this data, Cramer and her team saw that between two and four percent
of people with epilepsy reported feelings of depression, nervousness, hostility
and anxiety, rates that exceeded those found in placebo-treated patients and
patients with anxiety or cognitive disorders who received levetiracetam.
Cramer said that levetiracetam-treated epileptic patients also showed a
slightly higher risk of psychotic or suicidal behaviors, but that the rates of
these behaviors were very low.
In terms of why epileptics might experience more side effects, Cramer
suggested that the brains of people with epilepsy might contain differences that
allow medications to bring out certain side effects more strongly.
Epileptics "seem to be more sensitive to these drugs," she said.
The study was supported by UCB Pharma, which makes Keppra.
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