Volume 50, Issue s8 pp. 63-68

Rational polytherapy

Jacqueline A. French

Jacqueline A. French

New York University School of Medicine, New York, New York, U.S.A.

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Edward Faught

Edward Faught

Birmingham Department of Veterans’ Affairs Medical Center, The University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A.

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First published: 12 August 2009
Citations: 129
Address correspondence to Jacqueline A. French MD, NYU Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, 223 East 34th street, New York, NY 10016, U.S.A. E-mail: [email protected]

Summary

Monotherapy has been considered the gold standard for drug treatment of epilepsy. However, there is renewed interest in polytherapy because of the advent of new drugs with fewer drug interactions and novel mechanisms of action, and the realization that most patients with refractory epilepsy are eventually treated with drug combinations. Careful consideration must be given to drug additions and conversions; it may be less risky to add a drug than to convert from one monotherapy to another in patients with frequent or severe seizures. Rational choice of drug combinations is, at present, based more on avoidance of pharmacodynamic or pharmacokinetic side effects than on evidence for supra-additive efficacy. There are indications that combinations of two sodium-channel blocking agents are less effective than combinations of drugs with different primary mechanisms of action, and some human studies suggest that lamotrigine and valproate may be synergistic for efficacy. However, more animal and human research is needed, with attention to the effects of various combinations on both toxicity and seizure control.

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