4.4 Article

Cognitive and behavioral effects of cannabidiol in patients with treatment-resistant epilepsy

期刊

EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR
卷 114, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2020.107558

关键词

Cannabidiol; Epilepsy; Treatment-resistant; Cognitive; Behavioral; Adverse effects

资金

  1. Berta-Ottenstein-Program for Clinician Scientists from the Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Germany

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A study on the cognitive and behavioral effects of CBD in patients with treatment-resistant epilepsy found no significant cognitive decline and improvements in selective attention and caregiver-rated behavior. Over 89% of individual test results showed stability or improvement, with cognitive and behavioral changes not correlated with CBD dose. The results suggest an encouraging side-effect profile of CBD in terms of cognition and behavior, calling for replication with larger samples for validation.
Purpose: Therapeutic use of cannabidiol (CBD) in intractable epilepsies has increased considerably over the last ten years. As more evidence for the potentially beneficial effects of CBD on different epilepsy types is emerging, it is important to monitor potential cognitive and behavioral side effects. So far, studies including standardized neuropsychological data in the context of treatment with CBD in epilepsy patients are sparse. The present open-label study examines cognitive and behavioral effects of CBD in children and adults with treatment resistant epilepsy. Method: Thirty-nine patients with treatment-resistant epilepsy completed the study protocol, i.e. they were tested at baseline (T0) and after three months of CBD treatment (T1). Patients completed standardized neuropsychological tests on memory, executive functions and attention if they were capable. For cognitively impaired patients who could not complete cognitive tests, caregiver interviews were conducted and caregiver questionnaires completed. Results: Significant cognitive decline from T0 to T1 was observed on none of the included measures. There was a significant improvement on a measure of selective attention and on a caregiver-rated behavioral measure. More than 89% of all individual test results remained stable or showed reliable improvement from T0 to T1. Cognitive and behavioral changes from T0 to T1 were not significantly correlated with CBD dose. Improvements in short-term/working memory were significantly related to better therapy response. Conclusion: No adverse group-level effects of CBD treatment were detected. On an individual level, most test results remained stable or were improved. Cognitive change was not related to CBD dose. The present results show that, from a cognitive and behavioral point of view, CBD seems to have an encouraging side-effect profile. The results need to be replicated with larger samples. (C) 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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