Wpływ leków przeciwpadaczkowych na funkcję tarczycy u pacjentów z padaczką

PubMed➕ 23.04.2026Epilepsy Behav

Impact of antiseizure medications on thyroid function in persons with epilepsy

W skrócie

Badanie wykazało, że leki przeciwpadaczkowe mogą uszkadzać tarczycę - u ponad 11% pacjentów stwierdzono podkliniczne niedoczynności tarczycy, a u 10% centralną niedoczynność. Starsze leki przeciwpadaczkowe częściej wywoływały niedoczynność podkliniczną, podczas gdy nowsze leki miały podobne ryzyko niedoczynności centralnej. Lekarze rekomendują coroczne badania tarczycy u wszystkich pacjentów na lekach przeciwpadaczkowych, aby wcześnie wykryć problemy i uniknąć powikłań sercowo-naczyniowych.

Oryginalny abstract (angielski)

BACKGROUND: Antiseizure medications (ASMs) are central to epilepsy management but may disrupt endocrine function, particularly thyroid homeostasis. Subclinical and central hypothyroidism are increasingly recognized among ASM users, yet routine thyroid monitoring remains uncommon. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the prevalence and patterns of thyroid dysfunction in epilepsy patients on ASMs and compare the impact of older versus newer ASMs on thyroid function. METHODS: This cross-sectional study included 203 patients with epilepsy admitted to a tertiary epilepsy care centre in South India between July 2013 and March 2014. Patients with known thyroid disorders or other conditions affecting thyroid function were excluded. Thyroid function tests (TSH, fT3, fT4) were performed. Subclinical hypothyroidism was defined as elevated TSH with normal fT3/fT4; central hypothyroidism as low fT3/fT4 with normal or low TSH. ASMs were categorized into older and newer groups. Data were analysed using SPSS with appropriate parametric and non-parametric methods. RESULTS: Subclinical hypothyroidism was found in 11.3% of patients, more common in generalized epilepsy (56.5%) than focal epilepsy (43.5%) (p = 0.005). Valproate and clonazepam were most frequently associated. Among patients on monotherapy, none on newer ASMs had subclinical hypothyroidism, whereas 14.9% on older ASMs were affected (p = 0.35). Central hypothyroidism occurred in 10.3%, predominantly among users of zonisamide, phenobarbital, oxcarbazepine, and clobazam. Both older and newer ASM groups showed similar central hypothyroidism rates (9.6% versus 9.1%) CONCLUSION: Both older and newer ASMs exert clinically significant effects on thyroid homeostasis. Older ASMs were more often linked to subclinical hypothyroidism, while central hypothyroidism risk was comparable across ASM types. Annual thyroid screening is recommended to detect dysfunction early and prevent metabolic and cardiovascular complications.

Metadane publikacji

Journal
Epilepsy Behav
Data publikacji
20.04.2026
PMID
42019260
DOI
10.1016/j.yebeh.2026.111058
Autorzy
Rohith MG, Bharanidharan G, Bhasi A, Ram NA, Manisha KY, Koshy KG, Menon RN, Radhakrishnan A
Słowa kluczowe
Anti-seizure medications (ASMs), Central hypothyroidism, Epilepsy, Subclinical hypothyroidism, Thyroid function tests (TFTs)
Źródło
PubMed