Cenobamate Expanded Access Program (EAP)
- Conditions
- Partial Epilepsy
- Registration Number
- NCT04513860
- Lead Sponsor
- SK Life Science, Inc.
- Brief Summary
This Cenobamate Expanded Access Program (EAP) is designed to continue providing treatment with Cenobamate (YKP3089) to patients with partial-onset epilepsy that were enrolled in the SK Life Science clinical trial YKP3089C013, YKP3089C017 or YKP3089C021.
- Detailed Description
This Expanded Access Program (EAP) is designed to provide access to an unlicensed drug that is approved in the United States for the treatment of a serious or life-threatening condition. This EAP will be sponsored by SK Life Science Inc. and managed by WEP Clinical. Cenobamate is approved for the treatment of partial onset seizures in adults in United States. The attached US Label (appendix 1) provides the most recent guidance for use of cenobamate.
The objective of this EAP is to continue providing treatment with Cenobamate (YKP3089) to patients with partial-onset epilepsy that were enrolled in the SK Life Science clinical trial YKP3089C013, YKP3089C017 or YKP3089C021. Access to Cenobamate under this guideline is considered a treatment scenario and is not a clinical trial.
Epilepsy is a symptom of a neurological problem that causes sudden, brief seizures. It leads to an increased risk of injury from accidents, an increased rate of mortality, and has a significant impact on quality of life. Epilepsy can occur as a result of a neurological injury, a structural brain lesion, as a part of many systemic medical diseases or may be generic in origin. The incidence of having epilepsy during a lifetime is between 2-5%. Available medications control seizures in 50% of patients and decrease seizure incidence in 75%. The remainder continued to have unacceptable number of seizures, side effects, and psychiatric symptoms. The high treatment failure may be the result of inadequate efficacy or intolerable side effects that lead to poor compliance.
Cenobamate is a novel small molecule that is an antiepileptic agent for partial onset seizures. The precise mechanism by which cenobamate exerts its therapeutic effects in patients with partial-onset seizures is unknown. Cenobamate has been demonstrated to reduce repetitive neuronal firing by inhibiting voltage-gated sodium currents. It is also a positive allosteric modulator of the γ-aminobutyric acid (GABAA) ion channel.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- APPROVED_FOR_MARKETING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- Not specified
Not provided
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- EXPANDED_ACCESS
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method