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【medical-news】唾液标本可以反映拉莫三嗪血药浓
December 7, 2007 — A simple saliva test in pregnant and postpartum women with epilepsy might offer a noninvasive, more practical and convenient method of monitoring serum concentrations of the anti-epileptic drug (AED) lamotrigine.
In a small pilot study presented here at the American Epilepsy Society 61st Annual Meeting, investigators at the Cleveland Clinic demonstrated that maternal salivary concentrations of lamotrigine closely correlated with blood levels throughout pregnancy and up to 3 months postpartum.
"Like many other anti-epileptic medications, we know lamotrigine blood levels can change throughout pregnancy and increase a woman's risk of having a breakthrough seizure or toxicity. This warrants careful monitoring, but blood testing is invasive. The results of this study indicate that a quick and simple saliva test may suffice as a noninvasive alternative," study investigator Tanvir Syed, MD, MPH, told Medscape.
A recent study by investigators at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia showed that lamotrigine monotherapy is associated with an increase in seizure frequency in up to 75% of pregnancies, and that clearance of the drug can increase by 89% in the third trimester, compared with prepregnancy levels (Neurology. Published online November 28, 2007).
Furthermore, they found that ratio-to-target concentrations of less than 65% were a predictor of seizure worsening, a finding that might inform future treatment guidelines and highlight the need for careful, frequent, AED monitoring.
Stable Relationship
The current study included 11 pregnant women in the first trimester of pregnancy or in the second trimester with a prepregnancy baseline lamotrigine concentration. To qualify for study enrolment, women had to be on a stable dose of lamotrigine for a minimum of 2 weeks before entering the study.
Individuals with significant hematologic or metabolic abnormalities and those with a history of noncompliance were excluded from the study. A total of 8 study subjects had focal epilepsy and 3 had idiopathic generalized epilepsy. All subjects were on lamotrigine for seizure control; however. 3 women were also taking carbamazepine.
Blood and salivary samples were collected during each month of pregnancy, at delivery, at 24-, 48-, and 72-hours postpartum, and then 1 to 2 weeks and 3 months postpartum. Ultimately, time was divided into broad categories: baseline (antepartum), pregnancy trimesters, and postpartum periods.
Generalizable Results?
A total of 105 concurrent serum and salivary samples were obtained. Lamotrigine dose was increased in 9 cases during pregnancy because of fluctuating AED clearance levels.
Despite these fluctuations, the researchers found that there was a stable relation between serum and salivary concentrations during all stages of pregnancy and in the postpartum period.
According to Dr. Syed, it is possible that saliva testing during pregnancy extends beyond lamotrigine to other AEDs. However, he said, this would require additional research.
"The extent to which other AEDs are represented in the saliva vs serum would probably vary between different medications, so each drug would have to be tested in a separate study," he said.
Dr. Syed added that future research will aim to replicate the results of this pilot study in a much larger cohort.
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/567125 本人认领该文翻译及编译工作,如24小时内因种种非主观因素,未能成功,请其他站友自由认领,谢谢! Saliva Test May Offer Noninvasive AED Drug Monitoring in Pregnant Women
唾液测试也许为孕期妇女提供了一种非侵入性抗癫痫药物监测方法.
December 7, 2007 — A simple saliva test in pregnant and postpartum women with epilepsy might offer a noninvasive, more practical and convenient method of monitoring serum concentrations of the anti-epileptic drug (AED) lamotrigine.
2007年12月7日消息:一项简单的唾液测试也许会为监测伴有癫痫的孕期及产后妇女的血浆拉莫三嗪血药浓度提供一种更方便且具实用性的非侵入性方法.
In a small pilot study presented here at the American Epilepsy Society 61st Annual Meeting, investigators at the Cleveland Clinic demonstrated that maternal salivary concentrations of lamotrigine closely correlated with blood levels throughout pregnancy and up to 3 months postpartum.
发表在美国癫痫协会第61界年会上的一项小规模研究中,克利夫兰诊所的研究人员们证实,在整个孕期及产后3月内,拉莫三嗪在母亲唾液中的药物浓度与血液中水平一致.
"Like many other anti-epileptic medications, we know lamotrigine blood levels can change throughout pregnancy and increase a woman's risk of having a breakthrough seizure or toxicity. This warrants careful monitoring, but blood testing is invasive. The results of this study indicate that a quick and simple saliva test may suffice as a noninvasive alternative," study investigator Tanvir Syed, MD, MPH, told Medscape.
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作者:admin@医学,生命科学 2011-08-31 05:19
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