PRAC recommends new measures to avoid topiramate exposure in pregnancy
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EMA’s safety committee (PRAC) recommends new measures to avoid exposure of children to topiramate-containing medicines in the womb, because the medicine may increase the risk of neurodevelopmental problems after exposure during pregnancy. Topiramate is already known to cause serious birth defects when used during pregnancy.
Topiramate?containing medicines are used in the EU for the treatment of epilepsy and prevention of migraine. In some EU countries, the medicine is also used in combination with phentermine for weight reduction. At present, topiramate must not be used to prevent migraine or manage body weight during pregnancy and patients who can become pregnant must use effective birth control when using topiramate.
For patients using topiramate for the treatment of epilepsy, the PRAC is now recommending that the medicine should not be used during pregnancy unless there is no other suitable treatment available.
The PRAC also recommends additional measures, in the form of a pregnancy prevention programme, to avoid exposure of children to topiramate in the womb. These measures will inform any woman or girl who is able to have children of the risks of taking topiramate during pregnancy and the need to avoid becoming pregnant while taking topiramate.
Healthcare professionals should ensure that all patients who can become pregnant are fully aware of the risks of taking topiramate during pregnancy. Alternative treatment options should be considered and the need for topiramate treatment should be reassessed at least annually.
The product information for topiramate-containing medicines will be updated to further highlight the risks and the measures to be taken. Patients and healthcare professionals will be provided with educational materials regarding the risks of using topiramate during pregnancy, and a patient card will be provided to the patient with each medicine package. A visible warning will also be added to the outer packaging of the medicine.
The recommendations follow the PRAC’s review of available data, including three recent observational studies1,2,3. Two of these studies, which used largely the same datasets, suggest that children born to mothers with epilepsy and who were exposed to topiramate in the womb may have a two- to three-fold higher risk of neurodevelopmental disorders, in particular autism spectrum disorders, intellectual disability or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), compared with children born to mothers with epilepsy not taking antiepileptic medication. The third study did not show an increased risk of these outcomes in children born to mothers exposed to topiramate in pregnancy, compared with children born to women with epilepsy not taking antiepileptic medication.
In its review, the PRAC confirmed the known increased risk of birth defects and reduced growth of the unborn child when mothers receive topiramate during pregnancy. Birth defects will occur in 4 to 9 out of every 100 children born to women who take topiramate during pregnancy, compared with 1 to 3 out of every 100 children born to women who do not take such treatment. Further, around 18 in every 100 children were smaller and weighed less than expected at birth when mothers had taken topiramate during pregnancy, compared with 5 in every 100 children born to mothers without epilepsy and not taking antiepileptic medication.
During the review PRAC also consulted a group of experts, patient representatives and specialists.
The companies that market topiramate must carry out a drug utilisation study and surveys of healthcare professionals and patients to assess the effectiveness of the new measures.
The PRAC recommendations will now be sent to the Co-ordination Group for Mutual Recognition and Decentralised Procedures – Human4 (CMDh), which will adopt a position.
A direct healthcare professional communication (DHPC) will be sent in due course to healthcare professionals prescribing, dispensing or administering the medicine. The DHPC will also be published on a dedicated page on the EMA website.
Topiramate is used on its own or together with other medicines to prevent epileptic seizures. The medicine is also used to prevent migraine headaches and, in some EU countries, for weight reduction in a fixed-dose combination with phentermine.
Topiramate is available in the European Union (EU) under various trade names, including Topamax, Topimax, Epitomax, and several generic medicines. In some EU countries topiramate is available in combination with phentermine as Qsiva.
The review of topiramate was initiated at the request of the French medicine agency, under Article 31 of Directive 2001/83/EC. This is related to a safety signal review that started in July 2022 and concluded in September 2022.
The review has been carried out by the Pharmacovigilance Risk Assessment Committee (PRAC), the Committee responsible for the evaluation of safety issues for human medicines, which has made a set of recommendations. As topiramate-containing medicines are all authorised nationally, the PRAC recommendations will now be sent to the Co-ordination Group for Mutual Recognition and Decentralised Procedures – Human (CMDh), which will adopt a position. The CMDh is a body representing EU Member States as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway. It is responsible for ensuring harmonised safety standards for medicines authorised via national procedures across the EU.