Complete adverse effect profile including incidence rates and management
Important Safety Information
This is not a complete list of all possible side effects. Contact your healthcare provider if you experience any unexpected symptoms. For serious or life-threatening side effects, seek emergency medical attention immediately.
ADVERSE REACTIONS The most commonly observed adverse events in placebo-controlled, parallel-group, add-on epilepsy trials associated with the use of tiagabine hydrochloride in combination with other antiepilepsy drugs not seen at an equivalent frequency among placebo-treated patients were dizziness/light-headedness, asthenia/lack of energy, somnolence, nausea, nervousness/irritability, tremor, abdominal pain, and thinking abnormal/difficulty with concentration or attention.
Approximately 21% of the 2531 patients who received tiagabine hydrochloride in clinical trials of epilepsy discontinued treatment because of an adverse event.
The adverse events most commonly associated with discontinuation were dizziness (1.7%), somnolence (1.6%), depression (1.3%), confusion (1.1%), and asthenia (1.1%).
In Studies 1 and 2 (U.S.
studies), the double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, add-on studies, the proportion of patients who discontinued treatment because of adverse events was 11% for the group treated with tiagabine hydrochloride and 6% for the placebo group.
The most common adverse events considered the primary reason for discontinuation were confusion (1.2%), somnolence (1.0%), and ataxia (1.0%).
Adverse Event Incidence in Controlled Clinical Trials: Table 5 lists treatment-emergent signs and symptoms that occurred in at least 1% of patients treated with tiagabine hydrochloride for epilepsy participating in parallel-group, placebo-controlled trials and were numerically more common in the tiagabine hydrochloride group.
In these studies, either tiagabine hydrochloride or placebo was added to the patient’s current antiepilepsy drug therapy.
Adverse events were usually mild or moderate in intensity.
The prescriber should be aware that these figures, obtained when tiagabine hydrochloride was added to concurrent antiepilepsy drug therapy, cannot be used to predict the frequency of adverse events in the course of usual medical practice when patient characteristics and other factors may differ from those prevailing during clinical studies.
WARNINGS Seizures in Patients Without Epilepsy: Post-marketing reports have shown that tiagabine hydrochloride use has been associated with new onset seizures and status epilepticus in patients without epilepsy.
Dose may be an important predisposing factor in the development of seizures, although seizures have been reported in patients taking daily doses of tiagabine hydrochloride as low as 4 mg/day.
In most cases, patients were using concomitant medications (antidepressants, antipsychotics, stimulants, narcotics) that are thought to lower the seizure threshold.
Some seizures occurred near the time of a dose increase, even after periods of prior stable dosing.
The tiagabine hydrochloride dosing recommendations in current labeling for treatment of epilepsy were based on use in patients with partial seizures 12 years of age and older, most of whom were taking enzyme-inducing antiepileptic drugs (AEDs;
Like all medications, Tiagabine Hydrochloride can cause side effects. However, not everyone who takes this medication will experience them. Many side effects are dose-dependent and may improve as your body adjusts to the medication. Others may require dose adjustment or medical attention.
Contact your healthcare provider promptly if you experience:
Seek immediate emergency medical care if you experience signs of: