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Chronobiology International
The Journal of Biological and Medical Rhythm Research
Volume 23, 2006 - Issue 5
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Original

Chronotherapeutic Dose Schedule of Phenytoin and Carbamazepine in Epileptic Patients

, &
Pages 1035-1046 | Received 17 Jan 2006, Accepted 16 May 2006, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The objective of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of a chronotherapeutic dosing schedule of phenytoin and carbamazepine versus a conventional dosing schedule for the treatment of tonic‐clonic epileptic patients. Of 148 epileptic subjects found to have subtherapeutic trough drug levels (subtherapeutic group, STG), 103 subjects who completed the study were randomized to either STG I (n=51) for treatment by the conventional dosing schedule (tablet phenytoin 100–400 mg/day OD or BD, tablet carbamazepine 200–800 mg BD, or both, equally divided doses with no fixed time of drug intake), with a dose increment but no change in usual time of drug administration allowed; or to STG II (n=52), with no dose increment permitted but a shift in all or most (two‐thirds or three‐fourths) of the daily dose of one or both medications to 20:00 h. The 62 patients who experienced drug toxicity reactions (toxicity group, TG) and who had serum drug levels in the toxic range were assigned to TG I for dose reduction or TG II for dose reduction and drug administration at 20:00 h. Those 16 subjects in STG I and 47 subjects in STG II who initially evidenced subtherapeutic trough drug concentrations exhibited therapeutic drug levels by the end of four weeks of treatment (p<0.01). A significantly greater number of TG II, as compared to TG I, subjects who experienced toxic reactions showed improved drug tolerance. There were no poor responders and more good responders (control of epilepsy for one year) in STG II compared to STG I subjects. The findings of this study indicate that a chronotherapeutic dosing schedule of phenytoin and carbamazepine involving the administration of most or all the daily dose of medication(s) at 20:00 h can improve the response of diurnally active epileptic patients not responding to standard doses, achieve therapeutic drug levels, and reduce toxic manifestations in subjects having drug concentrations beyond the therapeutic range.

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