
Staged anticonvulsant screening for chronic epilepsy
Author(s) -
Berdichevsky Yevgeny,
Saponjian Yero,
Park KyungIl,
Roach Bonnie,
Pouliot Wendy,
Lu Kimberly,
Swiercz Waldemar,
Dudek F. Edward,
Staley Kevin J.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
annals of clinical and translational neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.824
H-Index - 42
ISSN - 2328-9503
DOI - 10.1002/acn3.364
Subject(s) - epileptogenesis , epilepsy , medicine , anticonvulsant , in vivo , pharmacology , status epilepticus , hippocampal formation , neuroscience , anesthesia , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , psychiatry
Objective Current anticonvulsant screening programs are based on seizures evoked in normal animals. One‐third of epileptic patients do not respond to the anticonvulsants discovered with these models. We evaluated a tiered program based on chronic epilepsy and spontaneous seizures, with compounds advancing from high‐throughput in vitro models to low‐throughput in vivo models. Methods Epileptogenesis in organotypic hippocampal slice cultures was quantified by lactate production and lactate dehydrogenase release into culture media as rapid assays for seizure‐like activity and cell death, respectively. Compounds that reduced these biochemical measures were retested with in vitro electrophysiological confirmation (i.e., second stage). The third stage involved crossover testing in the kainate model of chronic epilepsy, with blinded analysis of spontaneous seizures after continuous electrographic recordings. Results We screened 407 compound‐concentration combinations. The cyclooxygenase inhibitor, celecoxib, had no effect on seizures evoked in normal brain tissue but demonstrated robust antiseizure activity in all tested models of chronic epilepsy. Interpretation The use of organotypic hippocampal cultures, where epileptogenesis occurs on a compressed time scale, and where seizure‐like activity and seizure‐induced cell death can be easily quantified with biomarker assays, allowed us to circumvent the throughput limitations of in vivo chronic epilepsy models. Ability to rapidly screen compounds in a chronic model of epilepsy allowed us to find an anticonvulsant that would be missed by screening in acute models.