Retention rate of Gabapentin in children with intractable epilepsies at 1 year

2012 
Abstract Gabapentin (GAB) is a newer second-line antiepileptic drug (AED) used in children. This is a multi-centre retrospective observational study of the efficacy, tolerability and retention rate in 105 children, aged 0–17.5 years (mean 10.1) over a 14 year period. The median age of epilepsy onset was 2.5 years (range 0–14.6). 72% started GAB as at least the 3rd AED, with 43% having been withdrawn from at least 2 AEDs. 77% had focal and 52% symptomatic epilepsies. The maintenance doses for GAB ranged 6.0–87.3mg/kg/day (mean 43.7). The study comprised 157 person-treatment years for GAB. GAB was well tolerated with 55% remaining on treatment beyond 1 year. No serious adverse events were reported whilst on GAB, but 39% reported possibly and probably related adverse events. Seizure improvement ( The results demonstrated the efficacy and tolerability of GAB in children with difficult to treat epilepsies, and a good response to treatment beyond 12 months, in both focal and generalised epilepsies.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    24
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []