Abstract

The clinical efficacy of phensuximide and methsuximide was studied in relation to plasma concentrations of these compounds and their desmethyl metabolites. Single- and chronic-dose studies of each drug were carried out in five patients with intractable seizures. Patients were evaluated before and during treatment by 6-hour simultaneous video and telemetered electroencephalographic recordings to characterize the seizure type and by daily determinations of plasma antiepileptic drug concentrations. Phensuximide had a mean half-life of 7.8 hours and accumulated to an average fasting level of only 5.7 micrograms per milliliter. Desmethylphensuximide averaged only 1.7 micrograms per milliliter with a similar half-life. Methsuximide had an even shorter half-life, averaging 1.4 hours, but its desmethyl metabolite had a mean half-life of 38 hours and therefore accumulated to levels in excess of 40 micrograms per milliliter. The addition of phensuximide to their regimens benefited none of the patients, but two had an excellent response to methsuximide. The failure of phensuximide and its desmethyl metabolite to accumulate to reasonable levels is the likely explanation for the relatively weak antiepileptic effect of phensuximide as compared with methsuximide.

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