Drug resistance in epilepsy:: Putative neurobiologic and clinical mechanisms

被引:374
作者
Schmidt, D
Löscher, W
机构
[1] Epilepsy Res Grp, D-14163 Berlin, Germany
[2] Univ Vet Med, Dept Pharmacol Toxicol & Pharm, Hannover, Germany
关键词
pharmacoresistance; antiepileptic drugs; multidrug transporters; sodium channels; GABA receptors; target hypothesis;
D O I
10.1111/j.1528-1167.2005.54904.x
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Drug-resistant epilepsy with uncontrolled severe seizures despite state-of-the-art medical treatment continues to be a major clinical problem for up to one in three patients with epilepsy. Although drug resistance may emerge or remit in the course of epilepsy or its treatment, in most patients, drug resistance seems to be continuous and to occur de novo. Unfortunately, current antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) do not seem to prevent or to reverse drug resistance in most patients, but add-on therapy with novel AEDs is able to exert a modest seizure reduction in as many as 50% of patients in short-term clinical trials, and a few become seizure free during the trial. It is not known why and how epilepsy becomes drug resistant, while other patients with seemingly identical seizure types can achieve seizure control with medication. Several putative mechanisms underlying drug resistance in epilepsy have been identified in recent years. Based on experimental and clinical studies, two major neurobiologic theories have been put forward: (a) removal of AEDs from the epileptogenic tissue through excessive expression of multidrug transporters, and (b) reduced drug-target sensitivity in epileptogenic brain tissue. On the clinical side, genetic and clinical features and structural brain lesions have been associated with drug resistance in epilepsy. In this article, we review the laboratory and clinical evidence to date supporting the drug-transport and the drug-target hypotheses and provide directions for future research, to define more clearly the role of these hypotheses in the clinical spectrum of drug-resistant epilepsy.
引用
收藏
页码:858 / 877
页数:20
相关论文
共 152 条
[1]   REMISSION OF SEIZURES AND RELAPSE IN PATIENTS WITH EPILEPSY [J].
ANNEGERS, JF ;
HAUSER, WA ;
ELVEBACK, LR .
EPILEPSIA, 1979, 20 (06) :729-737
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1991, Lancet, V337, P1175
[3]   Expression and cellular distribution of multidrug resistance-related proteins in the hippocampus of patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy [J].
Aronica, E ;
Gorter, JA ;
Ramkema, M ;
Redeker, S ;
Özbas-Gerçeker, F ;
van Vliet, EA ;
Scheffer, GL ;
Scheper, RJ ;
van der Valk, P ;
Baayen, JC ;
Troost, D .
EPILEPSIA, 2004, 45 (05) :441-451
[4]   Expression and cellular distribution of multidrug transporter proteins in two major causes of medically intractable epilepsy: Focal cortical dysplasia and glioneuronal tumors [J].
Aronica, E ;
Gorter, JA ;
Jansen, GH ;
Van Veelen, CWM ;
Van Rijen, PC ;
Leenstra, S ;
Ramkema, M ;
Scheffer, GL ;
Scheper, RJ ;
Troost, D .
NEUROSCIENCE, 2003, 118 (02) :417-429
[5]   ABC transporters and the blood-brain barrier [J].
Begley, DJ .
CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN, 2004, 10 (12) :1295-1312
[6]   Understanding the delay before epilepsy surgery: Who develops intractable focal epilepsy and when? [J].
Berg, AT .
CNS SPECTRUMS, 2004, 9 (02) :136-144
[7]   Do seizures beget seizures? An assessment of the clinical evidence in humans [J].
Berg, AT ;
Shinnar, S .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1997, 14 (02) :102-110
[8]   How long does it take for partial epilepsy to become intractable? [J].
Berg, AT ;
Langfitt, J ;
Shinnar, S ;
Vickrey, BG ;
Sperling, MR ;
Walczak, T ;
Bazil, C ;
Pacia, SV ;
Spencer, SS .
NEUROLOGY, 2003, 60 (02) :186-190
[9]   Early development of intractable epilepsy in children - A prospective study [J].
Berg, AT ;
Shinnar, S ;
Levy, SR ;
Testa, FM ;
Smith-Rapaport, S ;
Beckerman, B .
NEUROLOGY, 2001, 56 (11) :1445-1452
[10]  
Boggs Jane G., 2000, Epilepsia, V41, P222