Levetiracetam vs. Phenytoin

The epic, classic showdown from time immemorial: new vs. old.

But, more specifically, these are two trials set to determine relative utility of each in pediatric seizures, vying for the coveted “second-line” therapy recommendation once benzodiazepines have failed. The thought and hope is, of course, the newer agent – levetiracetam – is at least as efficatious, if not moreso, as it can be infused more quickly. The authors then propose levetiracetam is associated with fewer long-term adverse effects and medication interactions during oral maintenance, and, as such, allows for convenient continuation after intravenous initiation.

Generally speaking, these two trials are very similar – both open-label trials randomizing pediatric patients with ongoing seizures, both analyzing about 250 patients … and both demonstrating effectively similar results by different routes. EcLiPSE, interestingly, was designed as a superiority trial, with a primary outcome of time from randomization to seizure cessation. Median time to seizure cessation not statistically different at 35 minutes for fosphenytoin and 45 minutes for levetiracetam, with similar numbers of treatment failures for additional anticonvulsants or intubation. In ConSEPT, the primary outcome was cessation of seizure activity within 5 minutes of the end of the infusion, and here results favored phenytoin at 60% versus 50% for levetiracetam.

Effectively, however, the sample sizes are small enough, the types of patients heterogenous enough, and the differences small enough, the Bayesian interpretation is probably a wash. These are both fine second-line options, but these trials do not provide any data supporting levetiracetam as a superior option.

“Levetiracetam versus phenytoin for second-line treatment of paediatric convulsive status epilepticus (EcLiPSE): a multicentre, open-label, randomised trial”
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(19)30724-X/fulltext

“Levetiracetam versus phenytoin for second-line treatment of convulsive status epilepticus in children (ConSEPT): an open-label, multicentre, randomised controlled trial”
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(19)30722-6/fulltext