Antiseizure Medication Concentrations During Pregnancy

Page B. Pennell(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Ashwin Karanam(University of Minnesota), Kimford J. Meador(Stanford University), Elizabeth E. Gerard(Northwestern University), Laura A. Kalayjian(University of Southern California), Patricia Penovich(Minnesota Epilepsy Group), Abigail Matthews(Emmes (United States)), Thomas McElrath(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Angela K. Birnbaum(University of Minnesota), MONEAD Study Group, Morris J. Cohen, Maurice L. Druzin, Richard H. Finnell, Gregory L. Holmes, Lorene M. Nelson, Zachary N. Stowe, Linda Van Marter, Peter G. Wells, Mark S. Yerby, Eugene Moore, Ryan May, Dominic Ippolito, Carrie Brown, Chelsea P. Robalino, Julia Skinner, Lisa Davis, Nilay D. Shah, Brenda Leung, Mark Friedman, Hayley Loblein, Traci Sheer, Suzanne Strickland, Erin Latif, Yong Park, Delmaris Acosta-Cotte, Patty Ray, Alison Pack, Kirsten Cleary, Joyce Echo, Annette Zygmunt, Camilla Casadei, Evan Gedzelman, Mary Eileen Dolan, Kim E Ono, Donald J. Bearden, Christine Ghilian, Diane L. Teagarden, Melanee Newman, Paul C. McCabe, Michael J. Paglia, Cora Taylor, Rosemarie Delucca, Kristina Blessing, P. Emanuela Voinescu, Katrina Boyer, Ellen Hanson, Amy Young, Paige Hickey, J Strauss, Hayley Madeiros, Li Chen, Stephanie Allien, Yvonne Sheldon, Taylor Weinau, Gregory L. Barkley, Marianna Spanaki‐Varelas, Andrea Thomas, Jules E. C. Constantinou, Nazin Mahmood, Vibhangini S. Wasade, Shailaja Gaddam, Andrew Zillgitt, Taimur Anwar, Carla Sandles, Theresa Holmes, Emily A. Johnson, Gregory L. Krauss, Shari M. Lawson, Alison Pritchard, Matthew Ryan, Pam Coe, Julie Hanna, Katie Reger, Jenny Pohlman, Alisha Olson, Jacqueline A. French, William Schweizer, Chris Morrison, William S. MacAllister, Tobi Clements, Sean Hwang, Hima Bindu Tam Tam, Yael Cukier, Erica P. Meltzer, Jacqueline Helcer, Connie Lau, William A. Grobman, Joseph Coda, Emily S. Miller, Irena Bellinski, Elizabeth Bachman, Casey E. Krueger, Jordan Seliger, Jennifer DeWolfe, John Owen, Matthew Thompson, Cheryl Hall, David M. Labiner, James Maciulla, Jennifer Moon, Kayla Darris, Jannifer Cavitt, Michael Privitera, Kellie Flood-Schaffer, George Jewell, Lucy Mendoza, Enrique Serrano, Yasin Salih, Christin Bermudez, Michelle D. Miranda, Naymee Velez‐Ruiz, Pedro Figueredo, Anto Bagić, Alexandra Urban, Satya Gedela, Christina Patterson, Arundhathi Jeyabalan, Krestin J. Radonovich, Melissa Sutcliffe, Susan Beers, C. Alex Wiles, Sandra Alhaj, Alice Stek, Sonia Perez, Rachel Sierra, Jeffrey Tsai, John W. Miller, Jennie Mao, Vaishali Phatak, Michelle Kim, Andrea Cheng-Hakimian, Gina DeNoble, Maria Sam, Lamar Parker, Melissa Morris, Jessica Dimos, Danielle Miller
JAMA Neurology
February 14, 2022
Cited by 92Open Access
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Abstract

IMPORTANCE: During pregnancy in women with epilepsy, lower blood concentrations of antiseizure medications can have adverse clinical consequences. OBJECTIVE: To characterize pregnancy-associated concentration changes for several antiseizure medications among women with epilepsy. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Enrollment in this prospective, observational cohort study, Maternal Outcomes and Neurodevelopmental Effects of Antiepileptic Drugs (MONEAD), occurred from December 19, 2012, to February 11, 2016, at 20 US sites. Enrolled cohorts included pregnant women with epilepsy and nonpregnant control participants with epilepsy. Inclusion criteria were women aged 14 to 45 years, an intelligence quotient greater than 70 points, and, for the cohort of pregnant women, a fetal gestational age younger than 20 weeks. A total of 1087 women were assessed for eligibility; 397 were excluded and 230 declined. Data were analyzed from May 1, 2014, to June 30, 2021. EXPOSURE: Medication plasma concentrations in women taking monotherapy or in combination with noninteracting medications. The cohort of pregnant women was monitored through 9 months post partum, with similar time points for control participants. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Dose-normalized concentrations were calculated as total or unbound plasma medication concentrations divided by total daily dose. Phlebotomy was performed during 4 pregnancy study visits and 3 postpartum visits for the pregnant women and 7 visits over 18 months for control participants. The primary hypothesis was to test pregnancy changes of dose-normalized concentrations from nonpregnant postpartum samples compared with those of control participants. RESULTS: Of the 351 pregnant women and 109 control participants enrolled in MONEAD, 326 pregnant women (median [range] age, 29 [19-43] years) and 104 control participants (median [range] age, 29 [16-43] years) met eligibility criteria for this analysis. Compared with postpartum values, dose-normalized concentrations during pregnancy were decreased by up to 56.1% for lamotrigine (15.60 μg/L/mg to 6.85 μg/L/mg; P < .001), 36.8% for levetiracetam (11.33 μg/L/mg to 7.16 μg/L/mg; P < .001), 17.3% for carbamazepine (11.56 μg/L/mg to 7.97 μg/L/mg; P = .03), 32.6% for oxcarbazepine (11.55 μg/L/mg to 7.79 μg/L/mg; P < .001), 30.6% for unbound oxcarbazepine (6.15 μg/L/mg to 4.27 μg/L/mg; P < .001), 39.9% for lacosamide (26.14 μg/L/mg to 15.71 μg/L/mg; P < .001), and 29.8% for zonisamide (40.12 μg/L/mg to 28.15 μg/L/mg; P < .001). No significant changes occurred for unbound carbamazepine, carbamazepine-10,11-epoxide, and topiramate, although a decrease was observed for topiramate (29.83 μg/L/mg to 13.77 μg/L/mg; P = .18). Additionally, compared with dose-normalized concentrations from control participants, pregnancy dose-normalized median (SE) concentrations decreased significantly by week of gestational age: carbamazepine, -0.14 (0.06) μg/L/mg (P = .02); carbamazepine unbound, -0.04 (0.01) μg/L/mg (P = .01); lacosamide, -0.23 (0.07) μg/L/mg (P < .001); lamotrigine, -0.20 (0.02) μg/L/mg (P < .001); levetiracetam, -0.06 (0.03) μg/L/mg (P = .01); oxcarbazepine, -0.14 (0.04) μg/L/mg (P < .001); oxcarbazepine unbound, -0.11 (0.03) μg/L/mg (P < .001); and zonisamide, -0.53 (0.14) μg/L/mg (P < .001) except for topiramate (-0.35 [0.20] μg/L/mg per week) and carbamazepine-10,11-epoxide (0.02 [0.01] μg/L/mg). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Study results suggest that therapeutic drug monitoring should begin early in pregnancy and that increasing doses of these anticonvulsants may be needed throughout the course of pregnancy.


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