Bfd. Bourgeois, PHARMACOLOGICAL INTERVENTION AND TREATMENT OF CHILDHOOD SEIZURE DISORDERS - RELATIVE EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF ANTIEPILEPTIC DRUGS, Epilepsia, 35, 1994, pp. 190000018-190000023
Four antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) represent > 90% of all AEDs prescribed
in the United States. The efficacies of the available AEDs are surpri
singly similar and far from complete, and none is entirely safe. Thus,
the incidence of side effects is often the determining factor in the
choice of AED. Clinical decisions about which AED to select should be
made on the basis of the combination of efficacy and toxicity, express
ed as a protective or therapeutic index (TI). Efficacy seldom comes wi
thout some degree of toxicity, whereas toxicity can occur in the absen
ce of any efficacy. As the dose of the AED increases, efficacy can rea
ch a plateau but toxicity does not. Complete seizure control should no
t be the final goal of epilepsy treatment; optimal AED therapy is equa
l to the highest possible TI, not necessarily to maximal seizure contr
ol. Each AED has a different TI, and each has a different TI in every
patient. This is confounded further when combinations of AED are presc
ribed.