Br J Ophthalmol 2000;84:499-505
( May )
A controlled study of vigabatrin and visual abnormalities
Kaykhosrov Manuchehri, Sarah Goodman, Lynn Siviter, Simon Nightingale
Birmingham and
Midland Eye Centre, City Hospital, Dudley Road, Birmingham B18 7QU
Correspondence to: Mr Manuchehri 106455.2425{at}compuserve.com
Accepted for publication 4 January 2000
AIMS To assess the
visual function in epileptic patients who have received vigabatrin; to
compare this with the visual function in similar epileptic patients who
have never received vigabatrin; to investigate whether the severity of
visual field defect (VFD) is related to the dose of vigabatrin; to
consider other factors that may correlate with the severity of VFD.
METHODS 21 consecutive
patients who had taken vigabatrin at some time in their lives were
enrolled from the epilepsy clinic of the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital and
were compared with a group of 11 otherwise similar patients with
epilepsy who had never received vigabatrin. One patient taking
vigabatrin was excluded from the study because her visual field results
were unreliable because of multi-infarct dementia. 15 patients were
taking vigabatrin at the time of the study (VC), the other five had
taken vigabatrin some time in the past (VP). Each patient underwent
static perimetry using either the two point or the three point full
field 120 screening program on the Humphrey visual field analyser,
followed by an ophthalmic examination to rule out ocular causes for
VFDs. The visual fields from each patient were then analysed using a
method devised to convert the VFD into percentage defect in both eyes. In patients with known cerebral pathology that may affect the visual
pathway, only the unaffected homonymous hemifield was used.
RESULTS Nine of 20 (45%) patients in the vigabatrin group (VC and VP) complained of
blurring of vision compared with two of 11 (18%) controls. Four
patients (20%) in the vigabatrin group described flickering lights
compared with one control (9%). None had a posterior vitreous
detachment. Three of 30 (7.5%) eyes in the VC group had distant visual
acuity of 6/12 or worse compared with three of 22 (9%) controls and
five of 30 (16.7%) had near visual acuity worse than N6 compared with
one of 22 (4.5%) in the control group. A mean of 1.73 Ishihara plates
were misread in VC patients compared with 0.2 in the VP group and 0.18 in the controls. 11 of 15 (73.3%) patients in the VC group had greater
than 10% VFDs as opposed to one of 11 (9.1%) controls
( 2 test, p=0.002). In 12 of 15 (80%) VC patients the
percentage VFD was greater in the nasal hemifields than the temporal
hemifields compared with six of 11 (54.5%) controls. Significant
correlation was found between the severity of VFD and the total dose of
vigabatrin ingested for the 20 patients exposed to vigabatrin (VC and
VP: Spearman correlation coefficient=0.525; p=0.002), for the 15 patients taking vigabatrin at the time of examination (VC: Spearman
correlation coefficient=0.568; p=0.002).
CONCLUSION This pilot
study suggested that epileptic patients taking vigabatrin are at much
higher risk of developing VFDs compared with epileptic patients on
other antiepileptic drugs. The total ingested dose of vigabatrin
correlated significantly with the severity of VFDs especially in those
patients who had not stopped taking vigabatrin. In our group we found
that those who had taken a total dose of 1500 g or more of vigabatrin
were at risk of developing significant visual field defects.
© 2000 by British Journal of Ophthalmology
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