Journal
EPILEPSIA
Volume 64, Issue 3, Pages 567-585Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/epi.17426
Keywords
antiseizure medications; older adults; treatment
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Older adults with epilepsy are a diverse population, and individualized treatment approaches are crucial. Most studies have shown levetiracetam to have the best long-term seizure freedom outcomes, but there is limited research on other newer antiseizure medications. More studies are needed to understand the effectiveness and side effects of treatment, including the impact on quality of life. It is important to move beyond just seizure control and focus on long-term patient-centered outcomes.
Older adults represent a highly heterogeneous population, with multiple diverse subgroups. Therefore, an individualized approach to treatment is essential to meet the needs of each unique subgroup. Most comparative studies focusing on treatment of epilepsy in older adults have found that levetiracetam has the best chance of long-term seizure freedom. However, there is a lack of studies investigating other newer generation antiseizure medications (ASMs). Although a number of randomized clinical trials have been performed on older adults with epilepsy, the number of participants studied was generally small, and they only investigated short-term efficacy and tolerability. Quality of life as an outcome is often missing but is necessary to understand the effectiveness and possible side effects of treatment. Prognosis needs to move beyond the focus on seizure control to long-term patient-centered outcomes. Dosing studies with newer generation ASMs are needed to understand which treatments are the best in the older adults with different comorbidities. In particular, more high-level evidence is required for older adults with Alzheimer's disease with epilepsy and status epilepticus. Future treatment studies should use greater homogeneity in the inclusion criteria to allow for clearer findings that can be comparable with other studies to build the existing treatment evidence base.
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