- Most common antiepileptic causing neutropenia and/or agranulocytosis are : Carbamazepine (boxed warning), phenytoin, Phenobarbital, Valproate
- Other agents are such as below:
Carbamazepine
|
Agranulocytosis, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia,
leukocytosis
|
Phenytoin
|
Agranulocytosis, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia, granulocytopenia
|
Phenobarbitone
|
Agranulocytosis, megaloblastic anaemia, thrombocytopenia
|
Valproate
|
Thrombocytopenia (1-24%)
<1% leukopenia, pancytopenia, leukocytosis
|
Lamotrignine
|
<1% aplastic anemia, leukopenia, neutropenia, pancytopenia, thrombocytopenia
|
Levetiracetam
|
8% eosinophilia (4-16 years)
3% decreased WBC count
<1% pancytopenia (bone marrow suppression)
|
Management:
- Monitor for blood dyscrasias (routine lab investigations and/or inform patient to watch for fever, sore throat, rash, etc)
- Intense monitoring for high risk patients during the first 3 months of treatment
- Frequency depends on the results of each lab values
- discontinuation of therapy is usually not indicated unless symptoms are severe, persistent, or accompanied by infection.
- Leukopenia often reverses, even if carbamazepine treatment is continued.
- A severe risk of infection exists when the patient's neutrophil count falls below 500 mm
- www.lexicomp.com
- Careful Monitoring for Agranulocytosis During Carbamazepine Treatment. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1764526/
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