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Published in: Neurocritical Care 1/2022

25-02-2022 | Pregabalin | Original work

Pregabalin for Recurrent Seizures in Critical Illness: A Promising Adjunctive Therapy, Especially for cyclic Seizures

Authors: Katharina M. Busl, Michael W. K. Fong, Zachary Newcomer, Mitesh Patel, Scott A. Cohen, Rakesh Jadav, Christine N. Smith, Sotiris Mitropanopoulos, Maria Bruzzone, Maria Hella, Stephan Eisenschenk, Christopher P. Robinson, William H. Roth, Pouya Alexander Ameli, Marc-Alain Babi, Michael A. Pizzi, Emily J. Gilmore, Lawrence J. Hirsch, Carolina B. Maciel

Published in: Neurocritical Care | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Background

Pregabalin (PGB) is an effective adjunctive treatment for focal epilepsy and acts by binding to the alpha2-delta subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels to reduce excitatory neurotransmitter release. Limited data exist on its use in the neurocritical care setting, including cyclic seizures—a pattern of recurrent seizures occurring at nearly regular intervals. Although the mechanism underpinning cyclic seizures remains elusive, spreading excitation linked to spreading depolarizations may play a role in seizure recurrence and periodicity. PGB has been shown to increase spreading depolarization threshold; hence, we hypothesized that the magnitude of antiseizure effect from PGB is more pronounced in patients with cyclic versus noncyclic seizures in a critically ill cohort with recurrent seizures.

Methods

We conducted a retrospective case series of adults admitted to two academic neurointensive care units between January 2017 and March 2019 who received PGB for treatment of seizures. Data collected included demographics, etiology of brain injury, antiseizure medications, and outcome. Continuous electroencephalogram recordings 48 hours before and after PGB administration were reviewed by electroencephalographers blinded to the administration of antiseizure medications to obtain granular data on electrographic seizure burden. Cyclic seizures were determined quantitatively (i.e., < 50% variation of interseizure intervals for at least 50% of consecutive seizures). Coprimary outcomes were decrease in hourly seizure burden in minutes and decrease in seizure frequency in the 48 hours after PGB initiation. We used nonparametric tests for comparison of seizure frequency and burden and segmented linear regression to assess PGB effect.

Results

We included 16 patients; the median age was 69 years, 11 (68.7%) were women, three (18.8%) had undergone a neurosurgical procedure, and five (31%) had underlying epilepsy. All seizures had focal onset; ten patients (62.5%) had cyclic seizures. The median hourly seizure burden over the 48 hours prior to PGB initiation was 1.87 min/hour (interquartile range 1.49–8.53), and the median seizure frequency was 1.96 seizures/hour (interquartile range 1.06–3.41). In the 48 hours following PGB (median daily dose 300 mg, range 75–300 mg), the median number of seizures per hour was reduced by 0.80 seizures/hour (95% confidence interval 0.19–1.40), whereas the median hourly seizure burden decreased by 1.71 min/hour (95% confidence interval 0.38–3.04). When we compared patients with cyclic versus noncyclic seizures, there was a relative decrease in hourly seizure frequency (− 86.7% versus − 2%, p = 0.04) and hourly seizure burden (− 89% versus − 7.8%, p = 0.03) at 48 hours.

Conclusions

PGB was associated with a relative reduction in seizure burden in neurocritically ill patients with recurrent seizures, especially those with cyclic seizures, and may be considered in the therapeutic arsenal for refractory seizures. Whether this effect is mediated via modulation of spreading depolarization requires further study.
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Metadata
Title
Pregabalin for Recurrent Seizures in Critical Illness: A Promising Adjunctive Therapy, Especially for cyclic Seizures
Authors
Katharina M. Busl
Michael W. K. Fong
Zachary Newcomer
Mitesh Patel
Scott A. Cohen
Rakesh Jadav
Christine N. Smith
Sotiris Mitropanopoulos
Maria Bruzzone
Maria Hella
Stephan Eisenschenk
Christopher P. Robinson
William H. Roth
Pouya Alexander Ameli
Marc-Alain Babi
Michael A. Pizzi
Emily J. Gilmore
Lawrence J. Hirsch
Carolina B. Maciel
Publication date
25-02-2022
Publisher
Springer US
Keyword
Pregabalin
Published in
Neurocritical Care / Issue 1/2022
Print ISSN: 1541-6933
Electronic ISSN: 1556-0961
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12028-022-01459-6

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