Publications by authors named "C Le Beller"

Background: Drug-induced interstitial lung disease (DI-ILD) is a heterogeneous subgroup of interstitial lung diseases (ILD). The number of molecules involved is increasing with time. Due to their low incidence, DI-ILDs may be detected only after a drug has been marketed, notably through Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) reports to pharmacovigilance centres.

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Article Synopsis
  • Parasomnias and sleep-related movement disorders (SRMD) are sleep disorders that can be triggered by certain medications, and this study aimed to review the literature on this association from January 2020 to June 2023.
  • Over 900 records were examined, identifying 73 drugs linked to common drug-induced parasomnias like nightmares and sleepwalking, as well as SRMDs such as restless legs syndrome and bruxism.
  • The study discusses potential mechanisms behind these disorders related to various neurotransmitters, including the impact of antipsychotics, opioids, and medications affecting serotonin, noradrenergic, and dopamine pathways, highlighting gaps in drug labeling for these conditions.
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Objectives: To evaluate long-term efficacy, safety, and tolerability, including behavior and executive functioning, during adjunctive lacosamide (LCM) treatment in pediatric patients (≥1 month to <18 years of age) with focal-onset or generalized seizures enrolled in 2 open-label, long-term follow-up trials.

Methods: Two open-label extension trials (SP848: NCT00938912; EP0034: NCT01964560) were conducted in pediatric patients who had participated in previous trials of adjunctive LCM (SP0847/NCT00938431; SP0966/NCT01969851; EP0060/NCT02710890; SP0967/NCT02477839; SP0969/NCT01921205); SP848 also directly enrolled eligible pediatric patients who had not previously participated in a clinical trial of LCM. Outcomes included retention, efficacy, and safety/tolerability.

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Objective: Primary objective was to evaluate efficacy of lacosamide administered concomitantly with 1-3 antiseizure medications in young children with uncontrolled focal (partial-onset) seizures.

Methods: Double-blind, parallel-group trial (SP0967: NCT02477839/2013-000717-20) conducted between June 2015 and May 2020 at hospitals and clinics in 25 countries. Patients (aged ≥1 month to <4 years) with uncontrolled focal seizures were randomized 1:1 to adjunctive lacosamide or placebo using an interactive voice/web response system and stratified by age.

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Objective: Double-blind, randomized, and placebo-controlled trial SP0967 (NCT02477839/2013-000717-20) did not demonstrate superior efficacy of lacosamide versus placebo in patients aged ≥1 month to <4 years with uncontrolled focal seizures, per ≤72 h video-electroencephalogram (video-EEG)-based primary endpoints (reduction in average daily frequency of focal seizures at end-of-maintenance [EOM] versus end-of-baseline [EOB], patients with ≥50% response). This was unexpected because randomized controlled trial SP0969 (NCT01921205) showed efficacy of lacosamide in patients aged ≥4 to <17 years with uncontrolled focal seizures. SP0969's primary endpoint was based on seizure diary instead of video-EEG, an issue with the latter being inter-reader variability.

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