AI Article Synopsis

  • Vigabatrin (VGB) is effective for treating Infantile Spasms (IS) in children, but its use should be limited due to potential toxicity, with an uncertain ideal treatment duration.
  • A study of 44 infants who responded well to VGB found no relapses in spasms after 6 months of treatment, compared to those treated longer.
  • The findings suggest that a 6-month course of VGB may adequately control spasms without significant development of late epilepsy, especially in patients with no identified cause for their condition.

Article Abstract

Vigabatrin (VGB) is approved as monotherapy for pediatric patients with Infantile Spasms (IS). Duration of VGB use should be limited because of the risk of retinal and neurotoxicity, but the optimal length of treatment is unknown. Our study aimed to determine the risk of spasms relapse after 6 months of VGB as first-line therapy in IS patients deemed VGB good responders. The participants were 44 infants with IS who demonstrated both absence of clinical spasms and hypsarrhythmia four weeks after starting VGB, obtained from two cohorts: 29 patients from a multicenter prospective cohort and 15 patients from a retrospective single-center cohort. We divided them post hoc into two groups according to the duration of VGB treatment: 6-month group (n=34) and >6-month group (n=10) and compared outcome between the two groups. No patient in either group had a relapse of spasms. For patients with non-identified etiology (NIE) in the 6 months treatment group, no other seizure types were observed. Late epilepsy, in the form of focal seizures, emerged in only 5/37 patients (3/30 in the 6-month treatment group; 2/7 in the extended treatment group); all within the first 6-9 months after VGB initiation. Our study provides substantial evidence that a shortened VGB course of 6 months could be sufficient to treat and prevent relapse of spasms in children with IS, particularly those with NIE.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.seizure.2021.07.032DOI Listing

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