Abstract
Epilepsy affects approximately 1% of the world population. Patients have recurrent seizures, increased physical and psychiatric comorbidities, and higher mortality rate than the general population. Over the last 40 years, research has resulted in 20 new antiseizure medications (ASMs) approved between 1990 and 2018. In spite of this, up to one-third of patients (~ 1 million patients in the USA) have drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE), with little change between 1982 and 2018, a period of intense new ASM development. A minority of patients with DRE may benefit from surgical treatment, but this specialized care remains challenging to scale. Therefore, the greatest hope for breakthroughs for patients with DRE is in pharmacologic therapies.Recently, several advances promise to change the outcomes for patients with DRE. Cenobamate, a drug with dual mechanisms of modulating sodium channel currents and GABA-A receptors, achieves 90-100% seizure reduction in 25-33% of patients with focal DRE, a response not observed with other ASMs. Fenfluramine, a serotonin-acting drug, dramatically reduces the frequency ofconvulsive seizuresin Dravet syndrome, a devastating developmental epileptic encephalopathy with severe DRE.Both drugs reduce mortality.In addition, the possibility of DRE prevention was recently raised in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex, a relatively common genetic form of epilepsy. A paradigm shift is emerging in the treatment of epilepsy. Seizure freedom has become attainable in a significant proportion of patients with focal DRE, and dramatic seizure reduction has been achieved in a developmental encephalopathy. Coupled with a rich pipeline of new compounds under clinical development, the long sought-after breakthrough in the treatment of epilepsy may finally be in sight.
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