The antiepileptic drug lacosamide (LCM) is approved in the United States and the European Union as monotherapy as well as adjunctive therapy for the treatment of focal seizures in children ≥4 years of age and adults. Using real-world therapeutic drug monitoring data, we performed a pharmacometric analysis for 315 pediatric patients (>1 month to <18 years of age) who received lacosamide as both monotherapy and adjunctive therapy. Population pharmacokinetic modeling was performed using nonlinear mixed-effects modeling with a 1-compartment structural model with linear elimination, where clearance and volume of distribution were allometrically scaled for body weight, with no further need for age-associated maturation functions. A covariate analysis for age, sex, race, and coadministration of other antiepileptic drugs identified phenobarbital and felbamate to significantly increase lacosamide clearance (1.71- and 1.46-fold, respectively). Based on the developed population pharmacokinetic model, simulations were performed in virtual pediatric patients to explore age-associated dose requirements to match lacosamide exposure in patient groups of different age with the exposure achieved in children ≥4 year of age with the weight-based dosing recommendations provided by the US Food and Drug Administration. Based on this approach, our analysis suggested that children ≥3 years of age needed the same dose as recommended by the US Food and Drug Administration for children ≥4 years of age (12 mg/kg/d), while children 1 to 3 years of age may need 13 to 14 mg/kg/d and infants between 1 month and 1 year of age may need 15 to 18 mg/kg/d (based on their actual age) to match the exposure seen in children ≥4 years of age.
Keywords: antiepileptic drugs; lacosamide; pediatrics; population pharmacokinetics; real-world data.
© 2021, The American College of Clinical Pharmacology.