The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion

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The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion. / Westgate, C.; Kamp-Jensen, C.; Israelsen, I.; Toft-Bertelsen, T.; Wardman, J.; Jensen, C.; Styrishave, B.; MacAulay, N.; Jensen, R. H.; Eftekhari, S.

In: Journal of Headache and Pain, Vol. 23, No. Suppl. 1, P218, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference abstract in journalResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Westgate, C, Kamp-Jensen, C, Israelsen, I, Toft-Bertelsen, T, Wardman, J, Jensen, C, Styrishave, B, MacAulay, N, Jensen, RH & Eftekhari, S 2022, 'The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion', Journal of Headache and Pain, vol. 23, no. Suppl. 1, P218.

APA

Westgate, C., Kamp-Jensen, C., Israelsen, I., Toft-Bertelsen, T., Wardman, J., Jensen, C., Styrishave, B., MacAulay, N., Jensen, R. H., & Eftekhari, S. (2022). The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion. Journal of Headache and Pain, 23(Suppl. 1), [P218].

Vancouver

Westgate C, Kamp-Jensen C, Israelsen I, Toft-Bertelsen T, Wardman J, Jensen C et al. The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion. Journal of Headache and Pain. 2022;23(Suppl. 1). P218.

Author

Westgate, C. ; Kamp-Jensen, C. ; Israelsen, I. ; Toft-Bertelsen, T. ; Wardman, J. ; Jensen, C. ; Styrishave, B. ; MacAulay, N. ; Jensen, R. H. ; Eftekhari, S. / The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion. In: Journal of Headache and Pain. 2022 ; Vol. 23, No. Suppl. 1.

Bibtex

@article{c21d5cdb3674425495cf7d847f5a5849,
title = "The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion",
abstract = "Lowering intracranial pressure (ICP) is the primary rationale of pharmacotherapy in Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH). There is limited evidence behind the use of the leading therapeutics, acetazolamide and topiramate, and how they lower ICP. We assessed the ICP lowering capacity of these drugs in rats and the molecular consequences hereof.MethodsIn a randomized, blinded cross-over study, we assessed the capacity of acetazolamide and topiramate to modulate ICP in female Sprague Dawley rats (N=10) using continuous telemetric ICP monitoring. We assessed single supra-clinical doses over 24 hours, and twice-daily clinically equivalent doses over 10 days. Drugs were delivered via oral gavage. The effects on CSF secretion rates and gene expression at the choroid plexus (CP) for CSF secretory genes were separately evaluated.ResultsOver 24 hours, both acetazolamide and topiramate lower ICP compared to vehicle with peak reduction of 25% at 2 hours. Administering these drugs in combination doubles the ICP lowering effect. Over 10 days, both acetazolamide and topiramate lower daily ICP compared to vehicle with no evidence of tachyphylaxis. Over the course of the day, the effect of acetazolamide wore off overnight whereas the ICP lowering effect of topiramate was sustained overnight relative to control. In accordance, topiramate reduced CSF secretion by 40%. Paradoxically, topiramate increased the expression of CSF secretory genes Slc12a2 and Slc4a10 at CP, whereas acetazolamide has no such effect.ConclusionWe demonstrate that both acetazolamide and topiramate rapidly lower ICP following administration and that there is an additive lowering ICP effect with combination of the drugs. The ICP lowering effect of these drugs persists with no tachyphylaxis with long term administration. These data thus provides the functional rationale for the clinical use of the combination of acetazolamide and topiramate in IIH and other conditions of raised ICP.",
author = "C. Westgate and C. Kamp-Jensen and I. Israelsen and T. Toft-Bertelsen and J. Wardman and C. Jensen and B. Styrishave and N. MacAulay and Jensen, {R. H.} and S. Eftekhari",
year = "2022",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "Journal of Headache and Pain",
issn = "1129-2369",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "Suppl. 1",
note = "16th European Headache Congress 2022 ; Conference date: 07-12-2022 Through 10-12-2022",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - The Acute and Chronic Effects of Acetazolamide and Topiramate on Intracranial Pressure and CSF Secretion

AU - Westgate, C.

AU - Kamp-Jensen, C.

AU - Israelsen, I.

AU - Toft-Bertelsen, T.

AU - Wardman, J.

AU - Jensen, C.

AU - Styrishave, B.

AU - MacAulay, N.

AU - Jensen, R. H.

AU - Eftekhari, S.

N1 - Conference code: 16

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Lowering intracranial pressure (ICP) is the primary rationale of pharmacotherapy in Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH). There is limited evidence behind the use of the leading therapeutics, acetazolamide and topiramate, and how they lower ICP. We assessed the ICP lowering capacity of these drugs in rats and the molecular consequences hereof.MethodsIn a randomized, blinded cross-over study, we assessed the capacity of acetazolamide and topiramate to modulate ICP in female Sprague Dawley rats (N=10) using continuous telemetric ICP monitoring. We assessed single supra-clinical doses over 24 hours, and twice-daily clinically equivalent doses over 10 days. Drugs were delivered via oral gavage. The effects on CSF secretion rates and gene expression at the choroid plexus (CP) for CSF secretory genes were separately evaluated.ResultsOver 24 hours, both acetazolamide and topiramate lower ICP compared to vehicle with peak reduction of 25% at 2 hours. Administering these drugs in combination doubles the ICP lowering effect. Over 10 days, both acetazolamide and topiramate lower daily ICP compared to vehicle with no evidence of tachyphylaxis. Over the course of the day, the effect of acetazolamide wore off overnight whereas the ICP lowering effect of topiramate was sustained overnight relative to control. In accordance, topiramate reduced CSF secretion by 40%. Paradoxically, topiramate increased the expression of CSF secretory genes Slc12a2 and Slc4a10 at CP, whereas acetazolamide has no such effect.ConclusionWe demonstrate that both acetazolamide and topiramate rapidly lower ICP following administration and that there is an additive lowering ICP effect with combination of the drugs. The ICP lowering effect of these drugs persists with no tachyphylaxis with long term administration. These data thus provides the functional rationale for the clinical use of the combination of acetazolamide and topiramate in IIH and other conditions of raised ICP.

AB - Lowering intracranial pressure (ICP) is the primary rationale of pharmacotherapy in Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH). There is limited evidence behind the use of the leading therapeutics, acetazolamide and topiramate, and how they lower ICP. We assessed the ICP lowering capacity of these drugs in rats and the molecular consequences hereof.MethodsIn a randomized, blinded cross-over study, we assessed the capacity of acetazolamide and topiramate to modulate ICP in female Sprague Dawley rats (N=10) using continuous telemetric ICP monitoring. We assessed single supra-clinical doses over 24 hours, and twice-daily clinically equivalent doses over 10 days. Drugs were delivered via oral gavage. The effects on CSF secretion rates and gene expression at the choroid plexus (CP) for CSF secretory genes were separately evaluated.ResultsOver 24 hours, both acetazolamide and topiramate lower ICP compared to vehicle with peak reduction of 25% at 2 hours. Administering these drugs in combination doubles the ICP lowering effect. Over 10 days, both acetazolamide and topiramate lower daily ICP compared to vehicle with no evidence of tachyphylaxis. Over the course of the day, the effect of acetazolamide wore off overnight whereas the ICP lowering effect of topiramate was sustained overnight relative to control. In accordance, topiramate reduced CSF secretion by 40%. Paradoxically, topiramate increased the expression of CSF secretory genes Slc12a2 and Slc4a10 at CP, whereas acetazolamide has no such effect.ConclusionWe demonstrate that both acetazolamide and topiramate rapidly lower ICP following administration and that there is an additive lowering ICP effect with combination of the drugs. The ICP lowering effect of these drugs persists with no tachyphylaxis with long term administration. These data thus provides the functional rationale for the clinical use of the combination of acetazolamide and topiramate in IIH and other conditions of raised ICP.

M3 - Conference abstract in journal

VL - 23

JO - Journal of Headache and Pain

JF - Journal of Headache and Pain

SN - 1129-2369

IS - Suppl. 1

M1 - P218

T2 - 16th European Headache Congress 2022

Y2 - 7 December 2022 through 10 December 2022

ER -

ID: 336125516