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Levetiracetam showed lower depression, insomnia and mood instability incidence than phenytoin after supratentorial tumour neurosurgery
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2020
Abstract
Phenytoin used to prevent seizures linked to brain cancer neurosurgery has shown many undesirable side effects and drug interactions with chemotherapy.
To evaluate the incidence of depression, insomnia, mood instability and early post surgery seizures, after Phenytoin (PHE) vs. Levetiracetam (LEV) monotherapy in patients with brain tumour subjected to a supratentorial brain tumour resection.
A prospective study in patients with supratentorial cancer diagnosis subjected to neurosurgery of resection was done. Patients were consecutive randomized to be treated with PHE (n = 26) 15 ml/kg IV-bolus, 125 mg/8 h IV x48 h, 100 mg/8 h O x7 days or with LEV (n = 34) 500 mg/12 h IV x48 h, 500 mg/12 h O x 7 days. Clinical, histological, TAC, EEG, seizures and undesirable side effects were analyzed.
60 patients (53% male, aged 52.5 ± 20 years) with glioblastoma multiform 45%, meningioma 43%, Ewing's sarcoma 6.7%, others 5.3% (size between 3–6 cm, in the right brain site-65.2%, in the frontal lobe-56.2%) were subjected to followed for a week after tumour resection. Undesirable side effects (USE) were (%LEV/%PHE): total (7.3%/31.5%), somnolence (0%/32.8%), headache (6.1%/22.3%), dizziness (0%/25.6%), difficulty with coordination (0%/23.5%), depression (6.2%/18.7%), lack of energy/strength (12.5%/33.8%), insomnia (11.3%/37.9%), mood instability (12.5%/22,6%), leukopenia (0%/16.9%) after surgery (p < 0.05). None of the patients taking Levetiracetam vs. 4 of the patients taking Phenytoin (0% vs. 15.3%) had seizures after surgery (p < 0.05).
Levetiracetam showed lower depression, insomnia, mood instability and seizures incidence than Phenytoin after supratentorial tumour neurosurgery.
- Type
- P03-60
- Information
- European Psychiatry , Volume 26 , Issue S2: Abstracts of the 19th European Congress of Psychiatry , March 2011 , pp. 1229
- Copyright
- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2011
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