• Neurology · Sep 2016

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study

    Adjunctive pregabalin vs gabapentin for focal seizures: Interpretation of comparative outcomes.

    • Jacqueline French, Paul Glue, Daniel Friedman, Mary Almas, Nandan Yardi, Lloyd Knapp, Verne Pitman, and Holly B Posner.
    • From the NYU Comprehensive Epilepsy Center (J.F., D.F.), New York, NY; Department of Psychological Medicine, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago (P.G.), New Zealand; Global Product Development, Pfizer Inc. (M.A., H.B.P.), New York, NY; Yardi Epilepsy Clinic, KEM and Vatsal Hospital (N.Y.), Pune, India; and Global Product Development, Pfizer Inc. (L.K., V.P.), Groton, CT. Jacqueline.French@nyumc.org.
    • Neurology. 2016 Sep 20; 87 (12): 1242-9.

    ObjectiveTo evaluate the comparative safety and adjunctive efficacy of pregabalin and gabapentin in reducing seizure frequency in patients with partial-onset seizures based on prestudy modeling showing superior efficacy for pregabalin.MethodsThe design of this comparative efficacy and safety study of pregabalin and gabapentin as adjunctive treatment in adults with refractory partial-onset seizures was randomized, flexible dose, double blind, and parallel group. The study included a 6-week baseline and a 21-week treatment phase. The primary endpoint was the percentage change from baseline in 28-day seizure rate to the treatment phase.ResultsA total of 484 patients were randomized to pregabalin (n = 242) or gabapentin (n = 242). Of these, 359 patients (187 pregabalin, 172 gabapentin) completed the treatment phase. The observed median and mean in percentage change from baseline was -58.65 and -47.7 (SD 48.3) for pregabalin and -57.43 and -45.28 (SD 60.6) for gabapentin. For the primary endpoint, there was no significant difference between treatments. The Hodges-Lehman estimated median difference was 0.0 (95% confidence interval -6.0 to 7.0). Safety profiles were comparable and consistent with prior trials.ConclusionsThe absence of the anticipated efficacy difference based on modeling of prior, nearly identical trials and the larger-than-expected response rates of the 2 antiepileptic drugs were unexpected. These findings raise questions that are potentially important to consider in future comparative efficacy trials.Clinicaltrialsgov IdentifierNCT00537940.Classification Of EvidenceThis study provides Class II evidence that for patients with partial seizures enrolled in this study, pregabalin is not superior to gabapentin in reducing seizure frequency. Because of the atypical response rates, the results of this study are poorly generalizable to other epilepsy populations.© 2016 American Academy of Neurology.

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