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The purpose of this study is to determine if treatment of epileptiform abnormalities in children with autism spectrum disorder will improve any behaviors in these children. The investigators will study a number of different behavioral outcomes including behaviors related to attention, social communication, repetitive behaviors, maladaptive behaviors, language, motor and sensory, and sleep. The investigators will use an anticonvulsant medication called valproic acid (in the form of sodium divalproex).
Full description
Epilepsy and epileptiform EEG abnormalities are common co-morbidities in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) that can be considered important biomarkers of cortical dysfunction in these disorders. They may represent a measure of the excitatory-inhibitory imbalance posited to be involved in the pathogenesis of the disorder. Treatment of epilepsy is always indicated, but treatment of isolated epileptiform EEG (i.e. in the absence of clinical seizures) is frankly controversial. Since data suggest that these epileptiform discharges are associated with deficits in attention, language and behavior, the investigators believe that they may represent an important and novel treatment target in this population. The proposed study brings together a group of investigators long interested in this problem in order to investigate the efficacy of using an anticonvulsant medication with spike suppression capabilities (VPA in the form of divalproex sodium) to treat children with ASD and isolated epileptiform EEGs. Recruiting from 3 large autism centers (Boston Children's Hospital (BCH) and Vanderbilt University (VU) and University of Louisville (U of L)) with very large pediatric epilepsy units, the investigators propose a 26 week randomized placebo controlled cross over study of VPA in 4-8 year old children with ASD with frequent epileptiform EEG discharges.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
History of epilepsy, known neurogenetic disorder or chromosomal abnormalities with high rates of epilepsy (15q duplication syndrome, 16p deletion/duplication syndrome, Fragile X, tuberous sclerosis complex), or structural brain lesion (prior stroke, migrational defects, brain malformations).
The presence of a severe epileptiform EEG on the sleep EEG referred to as electrical status epilepticus in sleep (ESES) in sleep
Previous treatment with divalproex sodium that is any one of the following:
Children who have had general anesthesia within the six months or sedation within 2 weeks of study enrollment.
Recent (less than two months prior to study entry) initiation of a behavioral therapy program or new psychotropic medication, or the plan to change or start a new therapy.
Presence of medical condition, such as carnitine deficiency, urea cycle disorder or other metabolic disorder that would be a contraindication to divalproex sodium usage.
Presence of a significant untreated medical problem (obstructive sleep apnea, restless legs syndrome, GERD, etc.) which may have significant impact on sleep study measures.
Renal, hepatic, pancreatic, or hematologic dysfunction as evidenced by values above upper limits of normal for BUN/creatinine, or values twice the upper limit of normal for serum transaminases (ALT/SGPT, AST/SGOT), values twice the upper limit of normal for serum lipase and amylase, platelets <80,000 /mcL, WBC<3.0 103 /mcL.
Concomitant use of medication contraindicated with divalproex sodium including topiramate, lamotrigine, and drugs that inhibit cytochrome p450 enzymes.
Behavioral management issues (e.g. self-injury, aggressiveness) severe enough to be of safety concerns (to subject and/or staff).
Absence of primary care physician.
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0 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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