Medline ® Abstract for Reference 49
of 'Evaluation and management of drug-resistant epilepsy'
49
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How long does it take for epilepsy to become intractable? A prospective investigation.
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Berg AT, Vickrey BG, Testa FM, Levy SR, Shinnar S, DiMario F, Smith S
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Ann Neurol. 2006;60(1):73.
OBJECTIVE:
To determine prospectively when in the course of epilepsy intractability becomes apparent.
METHODS:
Data are from a prospective cohort of 613 children followed for a median of 9.7 years. Epilepsy syndromes were grouped: focal, idiopathic, catastrophic, and other. Intractability was defined in two ways: (1) 2 drugs failed, 1 seizure/month, on average, for 18 months (stringent), and (2) failure of 2 drugs. Delayed intractability was defined as 3 or more years after epilepsy diagnosis.
RESULTS:
Eighty-three children (13.8%) met the stringent and 142 (23.2%) met the two-drug definition. Intractability depended on syndrome (p<0.0001): 26 (31.3%) children meeting stringent and 39 (27.5%) meeting the 2-drug definition had delayed intractability. Intractability was delayed more often in focal than catastrophic epilepsy (stringent: 46.2 vs 14.3%, p = 0.003; two-drug: 40.3 vs 2.2%, p<or= 0.0001). Early remission periods preceded delayed intractability in 65.4 to 74.3% of cases. After becoming intractable, 20.5% subsequently entered remission and 13.3% were seizure free at last contact.
INTERPRETATION:
Intractable epilepsy may be delayed, especially in focal epilepsy. It often is preceded by a quiescent period, followed by further remissions. These findings help explain why surgically treatable epilepsies may take 20 years or longer before referral to surgery.
AD
Department of Biology, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, 60115, USA. atberg@niu.edu
PMID
