seizures cats

How Effective is Zonisamide in Cats?

Seizures are a common reason for me to evaluate cats and therefore (I assume) something you encounter frequently. Seizures originate from the forebrain (prosencephalon) and can be secondary to idiopathic epilepsy, structural epilepsy (such as congenital disease, neoplasia, meningoencephalitis, cerebrovascular events, head trauma, and on goes the list), or metabolic seizures (hypoglycemia, thiamine deficiency, etc.).

The mainstay treatment for cats has been phenobarbital for many years and not without good reason. Phenobarbital controls seizures in over 90% of cats, regardless of the etiology, and has predictable clinical side effects. When cats cannot tolerate phenobarbital, or have seizures in excess while on phenobarbital, other antiepileptic drugs (AED) are added; one of those is zonisamide. Very little data has been published to date about zonisamide use in cats. A recent study out of UW (go Bucky) was published recently. I thought it was worth a quick summary, TT style.

How many cats were enrolled in this retrospective, multicenter study? 57

The median age of seizure onset was 7 years (range 0.17-22) and the median age of onset for cats diagnosed with idiopathic epilepsy was 8 years. Note the difference between cats and dogs! Dogs have a lower median age at onset! Importantly, note that 30 cats did not have advanced diagnostics (52%) which means a final diagnosis was not reached and therefore their disease may have affected their response to zonisamide (but we don’t know!).
How did the cats on zonisamide respond to treatment?

  • There was a significant decrease in seizures/month AND seizures/day after starting zonisamide. Note: we don’t know how long the seizures were monitored before starting zonisamide.

  • 70% of cats responded to zonisamide monotherapy (had less than 1 seizure per 3 months)

  • 56% of cats responded to zonisamide as add-on therapy

  • Almost 70% of cats diagnosed with idiopathic epilepsy responded to zonisamide but it isn’t clear if these cats were on monotherapy or add-on therapy.

  • The median dose was 7.5 mg/kg/day with about 1/3 of the cats receiving the drug once daily and 2/3 receiving it twice daily.

  • More cats obtained seizure control on twice daily dosing than once daily dosing but the side effects were more profound on twice daily dosing.

  • Side effects were noted in 15/57  cats and they included inappetence (10 cats), sedation, ataxia and vomiting for most reports. The duration of the side effects was up to 4 weeks after starting the medication. This is surprising and warrants further investigation. Anorexia has been the side effect I note more commonly but

  • No clinically significant CBC or biochemistry changes were noted on the cats in this study

So what’s the take home message? Would I use zonisamide in a cat? A qualified, yes. Phenobarbital still has a better reported seizure control compared to this cohort of cats on zonisamide. BUT it is worth a try if the cat fails treatment with phenobarbital and the don’t have a history of a sulfa drug reaction (zonisamide is a sulfa derivative). Starting dose should be less than 10 mg/kg daily, and side effects appear dose dependent…but last awhile!

Thanks for reading this week’s, TidBit Tuesday! I hope you learned a little something – I know I did! Keep those consults rolling. Have a great week and stay warm and safe out there.
 
 Reference: https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16984

Once Daily Phenobarbital for Cats?

A study by Dr. Mojarradi et al, out of Sweden, was recently published in the Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery reporting on once daily phenobarbital administration for cats with seizures. The reported half-life of phenobarbital in cats is 43-72 hours which could suggest once daily treatment is possible, however based on pharmacokinetic data twice daily dosing has been the standard of care. This retrospective study questioned if this was necessary. 

This study was a retrospective review of 9 cats up to 3 years from enrollment. They tracked the number of seizures before starting phenobarbital (unfortunately for an unknown amount of time) and compared that to the number of seizures after starting phenobarbital. The cats were required to have 2 or more seizures, separated by at least 24 hours, prior to starting phenobarbital however the frequency and duration of the seizure disorder for each cat isn't known. They do comment that 6/9 cats had 1 or more per month prior to starting phenobarbital. Phenobarbital was started at a mean dose of 1.8 mg/kg PO q24h, the mean serum concentration of phenobarbital was 11 ug/ml (range 6-17) at about 1 month (range 19-54 days). All but 1 cat was seizure-free at that first follow-up. The second and third follow-up appointments, roughly 1 year apart, showed a few more seizures in the time range however overall 8/9 cats were considered to be in seizure remission (no seizures for more than 12 months) at the end of the study. Seizure remission, as defined in this study, was less than 1 seizure every 12 months. If they started at 1 seizure/month, and ended at 1 per year that is a pretty remarkable improvement! So remarkable, I wonder if the phenobarbital is responsible for that shift, or not.
My questions:

  • Could such a low serum phenobarbital concentration cause such a dramatic response?

  • Could this be the natural regression to the mean (shifts that are unrelated to intervention)?

  • Did the retrospective nature of the study include only cats that did well on once daily phenobarbital, otherwise they would have taken twice daily phenobarbital and therefore been excluded from the study? Was this group of cats bound to do well, in other words, and it wasn't due to medication?


Another study by Pakozdy (https://doi.org/10.1177/1098612X12464627) noted that over time, most cats have a natural reduction in seizures while on anticonvulsant drugs. They tracked seizures in cats over a 10 year period and noted that most improved, some were seizure-free and some stopped medication. About 16% of the cats that stopped medication needed to have it restarted due to a return of seizures. 

The data reported in the study from Sweden suggests that we could administer phenobarbital once daily but the results are so remarkable (marked seizure improvement in a short period of time, low serum drug concentrations) that I feel compelled to repeat this study with a different, perhaps large, cohort of cats and make sure this is reliable. My advice: don't switch to once daily just yet!

Thanks for reading! I love managing seizures so please schedule a consult if you have a case that you'd like more assistance with seizure management. I'm happy to help!