[News] Newly discovered safety risks related to anti-epileptic drugs..

Welcome to the Coping With Epilepsy Forums

Welcome to the Coping With Epilepsy forums - a peer support community for folks dealing (directly or indirectly) with seizure disorders. You can visit the forum page to see the list of forum nodes (categories/rooms) for topics.

Please have a look around and if you like what you see, please consider registering an account and joining the discussions. When you register an account and log in, you may enjoy additional benefits including no ads, access to members only (ie. private) forum nodes and more. Registering an account is free - you have nothing to lose!

Endless

Even Keel
Messages
4,466
Reaction score
3
Points
0
This is just a reminder to always read the package insert for all of your medications, and be aware of the possible adverse reactions. Your doctor may or may not tell you about them. (It's impossible for them to keep up on everything!) It doesn't hurt to also do a google search to see if there is any recent research.

http://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailyme...essionid=84309dcb61360052f2243f404e6b26926421

OR

www.drugs.com

Newly discovered safety risks related to anti-epileptic drugs not passed to neurologists

A study by Johns Hopkins researchers shows that a fifth of U.S. neurologists appear unaware of serious drug safety risks associated with various anti-epilepsy drugs, potentially jeopardizing the health of patients who could be just as effectively treated with safer alternative medications.
The findings suggest that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration needs a better way to communicate information to specialists about newly discovered safety risks, the researchers say, since the warnings are in many cases not getting through to doctors making important prescribing decisions. And, the researchers add, while their new study, reported online in the journal Epilepsy and Behavior, was focused on neurologists and anti-epilepsy drugs, they believe their findings are applicable to a wide spectrum of medical specialists and medications.
"There is poor communication from the FDA to specialists, and there's some risk to patients because of this," says study leader Gregory L. Krauss, M.D., a professor of neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "Unless it's a major change requiring the FDA to issue a black box warning on a product, important information appears to be slipping through the cracks. We need a more systematic and comprehensive method so that doctors receive updated safety warnings in a format that guarantees they will see and digest what they need to protect patients."
Krauss and his colleagues surveyed 505 neurologists from across the nation in different types of medical practices between March and July of 2012. They asked about several new safety risks for antiseizure drugs recently identified by the FDA: increased suicidal thoughts or behavior with newer agents; high risks for birth defects and cognitive impairment in offspring of mothers taking divalproex (sold by the brand name Depakote); and risks for serious hypersensitivity reactions in some patients of Asian descent starting treatment with carbamazepine (Tegretol). One in five of the neurologists surveyed said they knew of none of the risks. Those neurologists who treat two hundred epilepsy patients a year or more were most likely to know all of the risks.
Krauss says he was most struck by the lack of understanding of the risk to certain Asian patients who take carbamazepine to control their seizures. The FDA in 2007 recommended that before initiating the drug in patients of Asian heritage, neurologists should screen to see if those patients have a specific haplotype, a specific section of DNA found in a few percent of Asian people, before prescribing the drug.
The researchers found that 70 percent of the neurologists who responded knew of the recommendation. While 147 neurologists (29.1 percent) reported initiating carbamazepine treatment in Asian patients, only 33 of them (22.5 percent) said they performed haplotype screening. Eighteen neurologists reported that their Asian patients developed carbamazepine-related hypersensitivity reactions - severe skin rashes that can lead to scarring, blisters in the mouth and shredding of the skin - during this time period.
"If their doctors were more educated about the risks," Krauss says, "these patients may have avoided these severe hypersensitivity reactions."
Krauss says doctors may not do the screening because it is difficult to find laboratories able to perform the haplotyping, and he notes that it may make more sense to prescribe an alternate drug to Asian patients.
The researchers found that 80 percent of respondents knew that the FDA had newly warned that the risk of suicide with newer drugs is 4.3 per 1,000, double what had previously been believed. Seventy percent said they counseled patients about the risk.
As for pregnancy risks related to divalproex, fewer than half of the respondents knew that a warning had been issued noting high risks of birth defects and of developmental risks in offspring (an 8 to 9 point drop in IQ). While 93 percent of respondents reported counseling women planning pregnancies about the birth defect risks of divalproex, Krauss says safer drugs should be used if possible during pregnancy.
Krauss says part of the problem is the absence of a single place for neurologists to find updated risk information. Neurologists get safety information from scattered sources; only a few get emails from the FDA, while others get the information from neurology societies, from continuing medical education courses or from newly published journal articles.
"The FDA needs to do better getting the warnings to prescribing doctors," he says. "There has to be a direct way to communicate risks without overwhelming physicians with messages."
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/264882.php
 
And if the AED is causing a new or different side effect and your neuro denies it, speak with your pharmacist. Often times, the pharmacist knows more about meds than the dr.
 
Also keep in mind that side-effects can start showing up after you have been taking the meds for years. Apparently AEDs and statins are the main meds that do that, according to my pharmacist.
 
My thoughts are that doctors these days are taking on too many patients, so they no longer have the time to deal with individuals thoroughly. That leaves us with the task of having to do a lot of the care ourselves. You'll see plenty of studies about patient empowerment and its effects on treatment success. Those who take some responsibility for educating themselves have a far higher chance of getting a better treatment outcome. It's reached the point where organisations are actually running patient empowerment programs to teach chronic illness sufferers how to manage their care with their doctors. We don't know how to report symptoms or which ones to report, and that leaves doctors without important information, whereas in the old days, they'd ask the necessary questions to find out exactly what was happening.

Taking meds for a long time can give you the illusion of security. I was taking Tegretol successfully for years and when I began to feel ill I assumed it was nothing. Luckily my psychiatrist was on the ball enough to do routine electrolyte tests and she turned up hyponatremia from the Tegretol. Same with lamitrogen. I put up with an itchy rash for ages, thinking I had some kind of bugs biting me. It was only when it became completely intolerable that I reported it and was told I had Stephen Johnsons syndrome--something I'd never been warned about. Now I make sure I know whether there is a risk of that with the meds I take. I've also never been warned about pregnancy risks on Epilim. Thankfully, I've been aware of that since early on. There are so many things we need to be aware of that I wonder how we manage.
 
All one has to do is watch TV for an hour. At least one drug company does an advertisement. It's funny how they get somebody with the speed of an auctioneer to quickly recite all the side effects right at the end of the commercial. And they use ploys...pleasant scenes like a happy family, friendly dog, a relaxing scene to lure you into 'liking' the product to pursue asking a doctor about it. I hardly envy doctors now.
 
Perhaps it should be illegal to advertise drugs to the general public that will ultimately require a prescription to obtain..

Seems they are clearly advertising just to have patients push docs for drugs and increase sales rather than taking a balanced approach focused on individual needs. Pushing drugs purely for profit would seem to not be in the public interest and should maybe be banned.
 
Perhaps it should be illegal to advertise drugs to the general public that will ultimately require a prescription to obtain..

I agree. To my knowledge the US & New Zealand are the only 2 countries that allow drug companies to advertise to the general public.
 
Back
Top Bottom