Hi Geofd.
Drugs that interfere with warfarin uptake usually interact with the P450 system and are classified as either inhibitors or inducers. Many anti-seizure drugs are inducers, which means that they would speed up the metabolism of warfarin from your system, resulting in needing a higher dose of warfarin to maintain target INR.
I am not on an anti-seizure drug, but I was prescribed amiodarone upon release from the hospital. Amiodarone is a P450 inhibitor and, as such, delays the metabolism of warfarin. It caused a major spike in my INR initially, something the prescribing nurse and pharmacist failed to warn me about. Ultimately my dosage of warfarin was adjusted and reduced by about 40% in order to counter the inhibitory effects of warfarin clearance by the amiodarone. Once I got the dosing right to keep me in the proper INR range, my INR remained very stable.
If the medication that you are on is, in fact, a P450 inducer, your system will metabolize warfarin quicker and more warfarin would be needed to keep INR in range. I would imagine that it would just be a matter of finding the right warfarin dose and would think that stability could be achieved once you get the dosing right. Hopefully someone with experience with warfarin and anti-seizure medication can chime in to share if this is the case, as I am just speculating based on my experience in achieving stability with a drug that was a P450 inhibitor.
Having said that, even if you are able to dose the right amount of warfarin to counter the quicker warfarin clearance, if one is prone to seizures the bigger concern may be the risk of having a seizure which leads to a head injury, which can be very serious or even fatal when on anti-coagulation.
From the Epilepsy Foundation:
"Anticoagulation always carries risks, but the risks are greater for people with epilepsy. Regardless of the antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) taken, the risk of prescribing anticoagulants chronically to epilepsy patients is increased because of the danger of falling during a seizure. A patient who falls and suffers head trauma while taking anticoagulants has a greater likelihood of intracranial bleeding."
https://www.epilepsy.com/living-epi...orders/anticoagulant-and-antiplatelet-therapy