The SANAD II study of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of valproate versus levetiracetam for newly diagnosed generalised and unclassifiable epilepsy: an open-label, non-inferiority, multicentre, phase 4, randomised controlled trial

Anthony G Marson(University of Liverpool), Girvan Burnside(University of Liverpool), Richard Appleton(University of Liverpool), Dave Smith(University of Liverpool), John Paul Leach(University of Glasgow), Graeme J. Sills(University of Liverpool), Catrin Tudur Smith(University of Liverpool), Catrin Plumpton(Bangor University), Dyfrig Hughes(Bangor University), Paula Williamson(University of Liverpool), Gus A. Baker(University of Liverpool), Silviya Balabanova(University of Liverpool), Claire Taylor(University of Liverpool), Richard Brown(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), D Hindley(Bolton NHS Foundation Trust), Stephen Howell(Royal Hallamshire Hospital), Melissa Maguire(University of Leeds), Rajiv Mohanraj(Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust), Phil E M Smith(University Hospital of Wales), Karen Lanyon, Mark Manford, Manali Chitre, Alasdair Parker, Nina Swiderska, Richard Appleton(University of Liverpool), James Pauling, Adrian Hughes(Bangor University), Rajat Das Gupta, Sadia Hanif, Mostafa Awadh, Sharmini Ragunathan, Nicola Cable, Paul Cooper(University of Liverpool), Daniel Hindley(Bolton NHS Foundation Trust), Karl Rakshi, Sophie Molloy, Markus Reuber, Kunle Ayonrinde, Martin Wilson, Satyanarayana Saladi, John Gibb(University of Glasgow), Lesley-Ann Funston, Damhait Cassidy, Jonathan Boyd, Mal Ratnayaka, Hani Faza, Martin Sadler, Hassan Al-Moasseb, Clare Galtrey, Damien Wren, Anas Olabi, Geraint Fuller, Muhammed Khan, Chetana Kallappa, Ravi Chinthapalli, Baba Aji(Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust), Rhys Davies, Kathryn A. Foster, Nikolas Hitiris, Melissa Maguire(University of Leeds), Nahin Hussain, Simon Dowson, Julie Ellison, Basil Sharrack, Vandna Gandhi, Robert Powell, Phil Tittensor(University Hospital of Wales), Beatrice A. Summers, Sastry Shashikiran, Penelope J Dison, Shanika Samarasekera, Doug McCorry, Kathleen M. White, Kannan Nithi, Martin Richardson, Richard Brown(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Rupert Page, David Deekollu, Sean Slaght, Stephen Warriner(Royal Hallamshire Hospital), Mansoor Ahmed, Abhijit Chaudhuri, Gabriel Chow, Javier Carod Artal, Danute Kucinskiene, Harish Sreenivasa, Singara Velmurugan, Christos Zipitis, Brendan McLean, Vaithianathar Lal, Angelous Gregoriou, Paul Maddison(University of Liverpool), Trevor Pickersgill, Joseph Anderson, Charlotte Lawthom, Stephen Howell(Royal Hallamshire Hospital), Gabriel Whitlingum, Wojtek Rakowicz, Lucy Kinton, Alisa McLellan, Sameer M. Zuberi, Andrew Kelso, Imelda Hughes(Bangor University), John Martland(University of Glasgow), Hedley Emsley, Christian de Goede, Singh Rp(University of Liverpool), Carl‐Christian Moor, Julia Aram, Rajiv Mohanraj(Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust), Kumar Sakthivel, Suresh Nelapatla, Chris Rittey, Ashwin Pinto, John Paul Leach(University of Glasgow), Hannah R. Cock, Anna Richardson, Erika Houston, Christopher Cooper, Geoff Lawson, Albert Massarano, Christine Burness, Anthony G Marson(University of Liverpool), Dave Smith(University of Liverpool), Udo Wieshmann, Indranil Dey, Puthuval Sivakumar, Lap-Kong Yeung, Phil E M Smith(University Hospital of Wales), H. Bentur, Tom Heafield, Anna Mathew, David F. Smith(University of Liverpool), Praveen Jauhari
The Lancet
April 1, 2021
Cited by 210Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Valproate is a first-line treatment for patients with newly diagnosed idiopathic generalised or difficult to classify epilepsy, but not for women of child-bearing potential because of teratogenicity. Levetiracetam is increasingly prescribed for these patient populations despite scarcity of evidence of clinical effectiveness or cost-effectiveness. We aimed to compare the long-term clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of levetiracetam compared with valproate in participants with newly diagnosed generalised or unclassifiable epilepsy. METHODS: We did an open-label, randomised controlled trial to compare levetiracetam with valproate as first-line treatment for patients with generalised or unclassified epilepsy. Adult and paediatric neurology services (69 centres overall) across the UK recruited participants aged 5 years or older (with no upper age limit) with two or more unprovoked generalised or unclassifiable seizures. Participants were randomly allocated (1:1) to receive either levetiracetam or valproate, using a minimisation programme with a random element utilising factors. Participants and investigators were aware of treatment allocation. For participants aged 12 years or older, the initial advised maintenance doses were 500 mg twice per day for levetiracetam and valproate, and for children aged 5-12 years, the initial daily maintenance doses advised were 25 mg/kg for valproate and 40 mg/kg for levetiracetam. All drugs were administered orally. SANAD II was designed to assess the non-inferiority of levetiracetam compared with valproate for the primary outcome time to 12-month remission. The non-inferiority limit was a hazard ratio (HR) of 1·314, which equates to an absolute difference of 10%. A HR greater than 1 indicated that an event was more likely on valproate. All participants were included in the intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis. Per-protocol (PP) analyses excluded participants with major protocol deviations and those who were subsequently diagnosed as not having epilepsy. Safety analyses included all participants who received one dose of any study drug. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN registry, 30294119 (EudraCt number: 2012-001884-64). FINDINGS: 520 participants were recruited between April 30, 2013, and Aug 2, 2016, and followed up for a further 2 years. 260 participants were randomly allocated to receive levetiracetam and 260 participants to receive valproate. The ITT analysis included all participants and the PP analysis included 255 participants randomly allocated to valproate and 254 randomly allocated to levetiracetam. Median age of participants was 13·9 years (range 5·0-94·4), 65% were male and 35% were female, 397 participants had generalised epilepsy, and 123 unclassified epilepsy. Levetiracetam did not meet the criteria for non-inferiority in the ITT analysis of time to 12-month remission (HR 1·19 [95% CI 0·96-1·47]); non-inferiority margin 1·314. The PP analysis showed that the 12-month remission was superior with valproate than with levetiracetam. There were two deaths, one in each group, that were unrelated to trial treatments. Adverse reactions were reported by 96 (37%) participants randomly assigned to valproate and 107 (42%) participants randomly assigned to levetiracetam. Levetiracetam was dominated by valproate in the cost-utility analysis, with a negative incremental net health benefit of -0·040 (95% central range -0·175 to 0·037) and a probability of 0·17 of being cost-effectiveness at a threshold of £20 000 per quality-adjusted life-year. Cost-effectiveness was based on differences between treatment groups in costs and quality-adjusted life-years. INTERPRETATION: Compared with valproate, levetiracetam was found to be neither clinically effective nor cost-effective. For girls and women of child-bearing potential, these results inform discussions about benefit and harm of avoiding valproate. FUNDING: National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment Programme.


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