4.1 Article

Lacosamide-Induced Dyskinesia in Children With Intractable Epilepsy

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHILD NEUROLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 10, Pages 662-666

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0883073820926634

Keywords

lacosamide; dyskinesia; intractable epilepsy; focal epilepsy; operculum

Funding

  1. KL2 Mentored Career Development Award of the Stanford Clinical and Translational Science Award [NIH KL2 TR 001083, UL1 TR 001085]

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Lacosamide, an antiepileptic drug prescribed for children with refractory focal epilepsy, is generally well tolerated, with dose-dependent adverse effects. We describe 4 children who developed a movement disorder in conjunction with the initiation and/or uptitration of lacosamide. Three patients developed dyskinesias involving the face or upper extremity whereas the fourth had substantial worsening of chronic facial tics. The patients all had histories suggestive of opercular dysfunction: 3 had seizure semiologies including hypersalivation, facial and upper extremity clonus while the fourth underwent resection of polymicrogyria involving the opercula. Onset, severity, and resolution of dyskinesias correlated with lacosamide dosing. These cases suggest that pediatric patients with dysfunction of the opercular cortex are at increased risk for developing drug-induced dyskinesias on high-dose lacosamide therapy. Practitioners should be aware of this potential side effect and consider weaning lacosamide or video electroencephalography (EEG) for differential diagnosis, particularly in pediatric patients with underlying opercular dysfunction.

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