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Comparison Between Lorazepam, Clonazepam and Clonazepam + Fosphenytoin for the Treatment of Out-of-hospital Generalized Status Epilepticus

Comparison Between Lorazepam, Clonazepam and Clonazepam + Fosphenytoin for the Treatment of Out-of-hospital Generalized Status Epilepticus in Adults Patients

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01870024
Acronym
LORACLOFT
Enrollment
434
Registered
2013-06-05
Start date
2013-06-26
Completion date
2018-02-23
Last updated
2018-10-11

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Status Epilepticus, Epilepsy

Keywords

status epilepticus, epilepsy, seizures, convulsive seizures, convulsions, benzodiazepines, anticonvulsants

Brief summary

The main purpose of this study is to know on one hand if lorazepam is more (effective) than clonazepam and on the other hand if lorazepam is also effective as the association clonazepam + fosphenytoin in out-of-hospital treatment of the generalized convulsive status epilepticus in adult patients.

Detailed description

Background: Early and rapid termination of status epilepticus with intravenous administration of benzodiazepines only or its association with other antiepileptic drug improves outcomes. Our out-of-hospital study aims to demonstrate on one hand the superiority of lorazepam compared with clonazepam and on the other hand the efficacy at least equivalent of lorazepam in comparison with the association clonazepam + fosphenytoin. If these hypotheses are demonstrated, the out-of-hospital treatment of the status epilepticus by lorazepam in monotherapy would then be strongly recommended, considering its efficacy and the simplicity of administration in the context of the pre-hospital emergency.Objective: To compare the efficacy of Lorazepam with that of Clonazepam and its association with Fosphenytoin for the treatment of out-of-hospital status epilepticus. Participating centers: 41 prehospital emergency services employing mobile intensive care units and located in urban areas in France participated in this study. In France, the management of out-of-hospital medical emergencies is under the responsibility of the Service d'Aide Medicale Urgente (SAMU). Mobile intensive care units are staffed by an attending emergency physician or anesthesiologist, a nurse, and an ambulance driver. The study is coordinated by the prehospital emergency service of Lariboisiere Hospital, University Paris 7 (Paris, France) Number of patients: 522 patients; 174 patients by group. Duration of the study: The total duration planned is of 48 months Intermediate analysis: An intermediate analysis is planned while 261 patients will be included (50 % of the inclusions).Duration of participation of every patient: 24 hours Data collection: prehospital data recording during the 60 min period of the study, and intrahospital data recording by the medical report of hospitalization. Methodology: Multicenter, randomized, double-blind trial with 3 arms. Main criteria of evaluation: the cessation of the status epilepticus and the absence of recurrence from T20 minutes until T60 minutes after the beginning of the treatment. The cessation of the status epilepticus is defined by the stop of any motor activity and any seizures or convulsive movements. The absence of recurrence is defined by the not occurrence of a new seizures after a period of cessation.

Interventions

DRUGClonazepam

clonazepam 0,015 mg/kg

fosphenytoin 20 mg/kg Equivalent Phenytoin (EP) by intravenous infusion over a period of 15 minutes

DRUGPlacebo

placebo 20 mg/kg by intravenous infusion over a period of 15 minutes

DRUGLorazepam

lorazepam 0,1mg/kg by intravenous injection over a period of 2 to 3 minutes)

Sponsors

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients aged 18 years or older * Out-of-hospital management * presenting one of the criteria below noticed by the physician of the mobile intensive care unit: 1. convulsive seizures at the time of treatment and were reported by reliable witnesses to have been continuously convulsing for longer than 5 minutes, without regaining consciousness, or 2. if they were having more than 2 repeated convulsive seizures at the time of treatment without regaining consciousness

Exclusion criteria

* Patient having been already included in the study during a previous episode of status epilepticus * Patient having already received before the arrival of the mobile intensive care unit one of theses studied drugs (lorazepam, clonazepam or fosphenytoin or phenytoin) * Latent status epilepticus in deep coma * Cerebral anoxia (post cardio respiratory arrest) * Severe head trauma * Patient presenting convulsive seizures of psychogenic origin * Lennox Gastaut's syndrome * Decision of urgent intubation * Patients of more than 110 kg ( estimated weight * Heart rate \< 60 bpm or \> 150 bpm * Systolic Blood Pressure \< 90 mmHg * Atrioventricular block of 2nd or 3rd degree * Ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation * Sensibility known about benzodiazepines, fosphenytoin, phenytoin, other hydantoins, or barbiturate * Contraindication known about benzodiazepines (severe respiratory failure, severe acute hepatic failure, myasthenia, syndrome of sleep apnea, glaucoma with closed angle * Contraindication known about fosphenytoin (intermittent acute porphyry) * Contraindication known about barbiturate (porphyry, severe respiratory failure, current treatment by saquinavir, ifosfamide and voriconazole, in association with millepertuis) * Person unaffiliated in a National Social Security Insurance * Pregnant or breast-feeding Woman * Impossibility to put an intravenous or intra-osseous catheter for the treatment injection * Absence of nurse in the mobile intensive care unit.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Percentage of patient with a cessation of seizures and absence of recurrencebetween 20 and 60 minutes after the beginning of the treatmentPercentage of patient with a cessation of seizures and absence of recurrence from 20 minutes until 60 minutes after the beginning of the treatment

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Percentage of patients having had a second injection of benzodiazepineup to 60 minutesPercentage of patients having had a second injection of benzodiazepine
Percentage of patients having had an injection of the second line treatmentup to 60 minutesPercentage of patients having had an injection of the second line treatment (i.e. Fosphenytoin or barbiturate)
Percentage of patients having a general anesthesia for refractory status epilepticusup to 60 minutesPercentage of patients having a general anesthesia for refractory status epilepticus
Percentage of patients having had a side effectup to 60 minutesPercentage of patients having had a side effect (low blood pressure, arrhythmias)
Duration between the first cessation and the recurrence of seizuresup to 60 minutesDuration between the first cessation and the recurrence of seizures
Glasgow Coma Scale60 minutesGlasgow Coma Scale on arrival at the hospital
Mortalityup to 60 minutesMortality in pre-hospital setting
Length of stay in Intensive Care Unitup to Day 30Length of stay in Intensive Care Unit
Length of stay in hospitalup to Day 30Length of stay in hospital
Percentage of patients having been mechanically ventilatedup to 60 minutesPercentage of patients having been mechanically ventilated in pre-hospital setting

Countries

France

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026