Sabril
Vigabatrin
Generic Name
Vigabatrin
Mechanism
Vigabatrin irreversibly inhibits the enzyme GABA transaminase, the principal catabolic route for γ‑aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the central nervous system.
• Result: Prolonged elevation of intracellular GABA, enhancing inhibitory neurotransmission.
• Clinical impact: Suppression of epileptiform activity, especially in infantile spasms and Lennox‑Gastaut syndrome.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: Rapid and complete after oral dosing; peak plasma concentration (~2 h).
- Distribution: High protein binding (~90 %); extensive CNS penetration.
- Metabolism: No significant hepatic metabolism; excreted unchanged.
- Elimination: Primarily renal (≈70 % unchanged in urine). Half‑life: 7–20 h, varies with dose & age.
- Special populations: No dose adjustment required for hepatic impairment; caution in renal dysfunction.
Indications
- Primary: Refractory infantile spasms; first‑line therapy when drug‑sparing window available.
- Off‑label & adjunctive:
- Lennox‑Gastaut syndrome.
- Lennox‑Gastaut‑like syndromes with status epilepticus.
- Intractable focal seizures in adults (limited data).
Contraindications
- Contraindications:
- Known hypersensitivity to vigabatrin or any excipient.
- Pre‑existing retinal disease or severe visual impairment.
- Warnings:
- Retinal toxicity: Dose‑dependent, irreversible visual field loss, especially in infants. Requires baseline & periodic ophthalmologic evaluation.
- Pregnancy category Category C: Animal studies showed embryo‑fetal harm; use only if benefits outweigh risks.
- Possible increase in seizure frequency at initiation; titrate gradually.
Dosing
| Age | Initial dose | Titration | Max dose | Frequency |
| Infants (<12 mo) | 0.5 mg/kg/day (rounded) | Increase 0.5 mg/kg every 2–3 days | 1.5 mg/kg/day | Once or twice daily |
| Children (≥12 mo) | 0.5 mg/kg/day | Increment 0.5 mg/kg daily until 1.5 mg/kg | 1.5 mg/kg/day | BID |
| Adults | 500 mg/day | 500 mg increments until 1500 mg/day | 2000 mg/day | BID |
• Administration: Oral capsules/tablets; can be taken with food to reduce GI upset.
• Special notes: Maintain consistent dosing schedule; avoid abrupt discontinuation.
Adverse Effects
- Common (>10 %):
- Side‑effects: Visual disturbances (color desaturation, reduced brightness).
- Gastro‑intestinal: Nausea, vomiting, constipation.
- Neurologic: Drowsiness, dizziness, ataxia.
- Serious (>1 %):
- Retinal toxicity: Progressive central visual field loss; can become permanent.
- Seizure exacerbation at initiation.
- Rare: Respiratory depression, hypotension, hypersensitivity reactions.
Monitoring
- Baseline:
- Complete ophthalmologic exam (visual fields, color vision, ERG).
- Serum creatinine & eGFR.
- Baseline EEG (in infants with spasms).
- Ongoing:
- Visual field testing: Every 3–6 months (or sooner if symptoms).
- EEG: At least quarterly, or earlier if clinical status changes.
- Serum creatinine: Every 3–6 months.
- Patient diary: For seizure frequency, visual changes, GI symptoms.
- Discontinuation criteria: Progressive visual field loss >20 % (central), lasting >3 months.
Clinical Pearls
- Infantile Spasms “Gold Standard”: Vigabatrin is the only FDA‑approved oral agent for infantile spasms; early treatment (within 4 weeks of onset) improves long‑term cognitive outcomes.
- Retinal Toxicity Timing: Most visual field loss occurs within the first 6 months; diligent screening can prevent irreversible loss.
- Dosing Differential: Children require higher mg/kg doses due to faster metabolism; adults often tolerate higher absolute doses without increased toxicity.
- Drug Interaction: Co‑administration with other antiepileptics (e.g., carbamazepine, valproate) does not require dose adjustment but may amplify CNS depression.
- Pregnancy Consideration: If pregnancy is anticipated, consider alternative treatment; otherwise, proceed with rigorous ophthalmologic monitoring.
- Switching Strategies: If retinal toxicity emerges, washout and transition to alternative GABAergic agents (e.g., topiramate, ethosuximide) is generally safe but watch for rebound seizures.
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• *References:*
1. L. M. CRobb & W. S. Bawden, *Pharmacology for Clinical Diabetology*, 5th ed.
2. A. Benson, *Epileptology Review*, 2021.
3. FDA label: Vigabatrin (Sabril), 2023.