Valproic acid as adjuvant treatment for convulsive status
epilepticus: a randomised clinical trial
by Tarek Sharshar,
Raphaël Porcher, Pierre Asfar, Lamiae Grimaldi, Julien Jabot, Laurent Argaud,
Christine Lebert, Pierre-Edouard Bollaert, Marie Line Harlay, Patrick Chillet,
Eric Maury, Francois Santoli, Pascal Blanc, Romain Sonneville, Dinh Chuyen Vu,
Benjamin Rohaut…
Critical Care volume 27,
Article number: 8 Published: 09
January 2023
Background
Generalised convulsive status epilepticus (GCSE) is a
medical emergency. Guidelines recommend a stepwise strategy of benzodiazepines
followed by a second-line anti-seizure medicine (ASM). However, GCSE is
uncontrolled in 20–40% patients and is associated with protracted
hospitalisation, disability, and mortality. The objective was to determine
whether valproic acid (VPA) as complementary treatment to the stepwise strategy
improves the outcomes of patients with de novo established GCSE.
Methods
This was a multicentre, double-blind, randomised controlled
trial in 244 adults admitted to intensive care units for GCSE in 16 French
hospitals between 2013 and 2018. Patients received standard care of
benzodiazepine and a second-line ASM (except VPA). Intervention patients
received a 30 mg/kg VPA loading dose, then a 1 mg/kg/h 12 h
infusion, whilst the placebo group received an identical intravenous
administration of 0.9% saline as a bolus and continuous infusion. Primary
outcome was proportion of patients discharged from hospital by day 15. The
secondary outcomes were seizure control, adverse events, and cognition at day
90.
Results
A total of 126 (52%) and 118 (48%) patients were included in
the VPA and placebo groups. 224 (93%) and 227 (93%) received a first-line and a
second-line ASM before VPA or placebo infusion. There was no between-group
difference for patients hospital-discharged at day 15 [VPA, 77 (61%) versus placebo,
72 (61%), adjusted relative risk 1.04; 95% confidence interval (0.89–1.19); p = 0.58].
There were no between-group differences for secondary outcomes.
Conclusions
VPA added to the recommended strategy for adult GCSE is well
tolerated but did not increase the proportion of patients hospital-discharged
by day 15.
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