Skip to main content
Canna~Fangled Abstracts

Protocol for a single patient therapy plan: A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled N-of-1 trial to assess the efficacy of cannabidiol in patients with intractable epilepsy

By September 23, 2020September 27th, 2020No Comments

doi: 10.1111/jpc.15078.

Online ahead of print.
Affiliations

Abstract

Aim: This paper describes the use of the single patient therapy plan (SPTP). The SPTP has been designed to assess the efficacy at an individual level of a commercially available cannabinoid product, cannabidiol, in reducing seizure frequency in paediatric patients with intractable epilepsy.

Methods: The SPTP is a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled N-of-1 trial designed to assess the efficacy of treatment in a neurology outpatient setting. The primary objective of the SPTP is to assess the efficacy of cannabidiol in reducing seizure frequency in each patient with intractable epilepsy, with change in seizure frequency being the primary outcome of interest. The analysis adopts a Bayesian approach, which provides results in the form of posterior probabilities that various levels of benefit (based on the primary outcome measure, seizure frequency) have been achieved under active treatment compared to placebo, accompanied by decision rules that provide thresholds for deciding whether treatment has been successful in the individual patient. The SPTP arrangement is most accurately considered part of clinical practice rather than research, since it is aimed at making clinical treatment decisions for individual patients and is not testing a hypothesis or collecting aggregate data. Therefore, Human Research Ethics Committee approval was considered not to be required, although it is recommended that hospital Clinical Ethics Committees provide ethical oversight.

Conclusion: These SPTP resources are made available so that they may inform clinical practice in the treatment of severe epilepsy or adapted for use in other conditions.

 

Keywords: anticonvulsant/therapeutic use, cannabidiol, child, drug resistant epilepsy, outcome assessment (health care)

Similar articles

See all similar articles

References

    1. D’Souza W, Quinn S, Fryer J et al. The prevalence and demographic distribution of treated epilepsy: A community-based study in Tasmania, Australia. Acta Neurol. Scand. 2012; 125: 96-104.
    1. Kalilani L, Sun X, Pelgrims B, Noack-Rink M, Villanueva V. The epidemiology of drug-resistant epilepsy: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Epilepsia 2018; 59: 2179-93.
    1. Devinsky O, Cross H, Laux L et al. Trial of Cannabidiol for drug-resistant seizures in the Dravet syndrome. N. Engl. J. Med. 2017; 376: 2011-20.
    1. Thiele E, Marsh E, French J et al. Cannabidiol in patients with seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (GWPCARE4): A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial. Lancet 2018; 391: 1085-96.
    1. Kravitz R, Duan N, DEcIDE Methods Center N-of-1 Guidance Panel. Design and Implementation of N-of-1 Trials: A User’s Guide. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2014. https://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/products/n-1-trials/research-2014-5; https://effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/n-1-trials_research-2014-5.pdf.

LinkOut – more resources

  • Full Text Sources

Leave a Reply