Pilot Study of Levetiracetam (Keppra® (Registered Trademark)) for Bipolar Illness
Information source: National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on June 20, 2008 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Bipolar Disorder
Intervention: levetiracetam (Drug)
Phase: Phase 2
Status: Completed
Sponsored by: National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Summary
This study will explore the possible effectiveness of levetiracetam in patients with bipolar
illness who have not responded adequately to standard treatments. Levetiracetam was recently
approved to treat seizures. Other drugs in the same class as levetiracetam, including
carbamazepine and valproate, are widely recognized as substitute medications for lithium or
are used as an adjunct to it, and other anticonvulsants have also shown promise in improving
bipolar symptoms.
Patients with bipolar illness whose manic, depressed or unstable moods are not adequately
controlled by their current treatment and who have not responded previously to two standard
treatments (i. e., lithium, valproate, carbamazepine or neuroleptics) may be eligible for this
study.
Participants will take levetiracetam starting at 500 mg daily. If this dose is well
tolerated, it will be increased to 500 mg twice a day. Every 3 days, doses may be increased
until the target dose of 3000 mg/day is reached. Higher doses, not to exceed 4000 mg/day,
may be tried in patients who do not respond fully to the lower doses. Patients and observers
will use standard ratings to evaluate the patients' response to therapy during the 8-week
study. If, after 8 weeks, the results appear promising, patients may continue treatment for
an additional 6 months to evaluate longer-term effects.
Clinical Details
Official title: Pilot Evaluation of Levetiracetam (Keppra® (Registered Trademark)) in Bipolar Illness
Study design: Treatment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Detailed description:
Almost all of the approved anticonvulsant compounds (with the exception of gabapentin and
tiagabine) have now been suggested to have acute antimanic or more long-term mood stabilizing
properties. Carbamazepine and valproate have gained a widely recognized role in treatment
algorithms of bipolar illness, and lamotrigine has shown promising antidepressant effects.
Levetiracetam (Keppra® (Registered Trademark)) is the most recently approved anti-epileptic
drug available, and deserves pilot exploration in bipolar illness for a variety of reasons.
These include: its positive side-effects profile; it is a derivative of the nootropic agent
piracetam which has memory-enhancing properties in animal studies; it likely has a unique
mechanism of action since it is not active on most of the traditional excitatory and
inhibitory neurotransmitter systems; it is not active on traditional anticonvulsant models
such as pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) or maximum electroshock (MES) seizures, but is able to stop
both the development and completed phase of amygdala-kindled seizures; and it is not
metabolized by hepatic enzymes and thus has few adverse pharmacokinetic interactions.
We propose pilot exploration of levetiracetam as an adjunctive agent in patients with bipolar
illness who are inadequately responsive to routine psychopharmacological agents for bipolar
illness. At the NIMH we will study a maximum of 10 acutely depressed, 10 manic, and 10
cycling patients enrolled in Protocol 97-M-0039. We would start at Levetiracetam doses of
500 mg/day, and not to exceed 4000 mg/day. Response will be based primarily on the
percentage of patients showing "much" or "very much" improvement on the GCI-BP score in each
of the three groups as augmented by the percentage decrement on cross-sectional scales such
as the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDS) and Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) in
conjunction with prospective ratings on the NIMH-LCMp. Should preliminary evidence of
efficacy be observed in this open add-on clinical trial, more systematic controlled studies
will then be designed for confirmation of promising target areas of efficacy.
Eligibility
Minimum age: N/A.
Maximum age: N/A.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Patients meeting DSM - IV criteria for bipolar I, bipolar II, bipolar NOS, and
schizoaffective illness-bipolar type will be eligible for study. They will be enrolled in
approved Protocol #97-M-0039 and thus will not have H. I.V. and will have provided consent
for all of the rating forms utilized in this study.
Patients with inadequate response to two standard agents (i. e., lithium, valproate,
carbamazepine, or neuroleptics) in the treatment of bipolar illness will be eligible for
open adjunctive levetiracetam.
If serum creatinine is above normal, a creatinine clearance will be preformed; this must be
above 85 in order for a patient to be eligible for this study.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Women of child-bearing age who are not on an active method of birth control or who are
likely to become pregnant will be excluded.
Men or women with significant renal disease will also be excluded.
For the depressed phase, patients will have an IDS score of 18 or greater, an LCM
depression score of low moderate or greater, and a GCI-BP severity score of moderate or
greater for more than 2 weeks, i. e., the DSM-IV durational criteria.
For the hypomanic/manic phase, patients will have an YMRS score of 8 or greater, an LCM
mania rating of mild or greater, and a CGI-BP severity score of moderately ill or greater
for 7 days or more.
Those in the cycling group would meet the severity criteria for depression and mania. They
would have four or more mood "switches," and have an overall illness rating on the CGI-BP
severity score of moderate or greater.
Locations and Contacts
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), Bethesda, Maryland 20892, United States
Additional Information
Related publications: Altshuler LL, Keck PE Jr, McElroy SL, Suppes T, Brown ES, Denicoff K, Frye M, Gitlin M, Hwang S, Goodman R, Leverich G, Nolen W, Kupka R, Post R. Gabapentin in the acute treatment of refractory bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disord. 1999 Sep;1(1):61-5. Denicoff KD, Smith-Jackson EE, Disney ER, Ali SO, Leverich GS, Post RM. Comparative prophylactic efficacy of lithium, carbamazepine, and the combination in bipolar disorder. J Clin Psychiatry. 1997 Nov;58(11):470-8. Calabrese JR, Rapport DJ, Shelton MD, Kujawa M, Kimmel SE. Clinical studies on the use of lamotrigine in bipolar disorder. Neuropsychobiology. 1998 Oct;38(3):185-91. Review.
Starting date: April 2001
Ending date: April 2003
Last updated: March 3, 2008
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