Sudden Death and Cardiac Arrythmia With Lamotrigine: A Rapid Systematic Review.

Neurology

From the Stichting Epilepsie Instellingen Nederland (SEIN) (J.W.B., J.W.S., R.D.T., M.R.K.), Heemstede; Department of Neurology (J.W.B., R.D.T.), Leiden University Medical Centre, the Netherlands; School of Public Health (N.H., M.R.K.) and Department of Neurosciences (M.R.K.), Université de Montréal, Canada; Department of Neurology (O.D., J.A.F.), New York University Grossman School of Medicine and NYU Langone Health, New York; UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology (J.W.S., R.D.T.), London; and Chalfont Centre for Epilepsy (J.W.S., R.D.T.), Chalfont St Peter, UK.

Published: April 2022

Background And Objectives: A recent Food and Drug Administration warning concerning an arrhythmogenic potential of lamotrigine created concern in the neurologic community. This warning was based on in vitro studies, but no clinically relevant risk was considered. This rapid systematic review aims to elucidate the risk of lamotrigine on sudden death or ECG abnormalities.

Methods: We conducted a systematic search of Ovid Medline and Ovid Embase, including randomized controlled trials and observational studies and studies of people with or without epilepsy, with the outcome measures sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) or sudden cardiac death as well as the development or worsening of ECG abnormalities. We evaluated the sudden death definitions used in all included studies, as some could have used unclear or overlapping definitions. We used the American Academy of Neurology risk of bias tool to evaluate the class of evidence and the GRADE approach to evaluate our confidence in the evidence.

Results: We included 26 studies with 24,962 participants, of whom 2,326 used lamotrigine. Twelve studies showed no significant risk of SUDEP for lamotrigine users. One study reporting on sudden cardiac death and 3 studies with unclear sudden death definitions did not report an elevated risk of death in lamotrigine users compared to controls. In 10 studies reporting on ECG measures, there was no statistically significant increased risk among lamotrigine users except in 2 studies. These 2 studies reported either "slight increases" in PR interval or an increased PQ interval that the primary study authors believed to be related to structural cardiac differences rather than an effect of lamotrigine. One study was rated Class II; all others were Class III or IV. We had very low confidence in the evidence following the GRADE assessment. None of the studies examined the risk of lamotrigine in people with preexisting cardiac conditions.

Discussion: There is insufficient evidence to support or refute that lamotrigine is associated with sudden death or ECG changes in people with or without epilepsy as compared to antiseizure medication or placebo, due to the high risk of bias in most studies and low precision and inconsistency in the reported results.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000200164DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sudden death
20
studies
12
risk lamotrigine
12
lamotrigine users
12
lamotrigine
10
sudden
8
rapid systematic
8
systematic review
8
risk
8
death
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!