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Comparative Study
. 2007 Jun;48(6):1128-32.
doi: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2007.01072.x. Epub 2007 Apr 18.

Long-term prognosis for symptomatic (secondarily) generalized epilepsies: a population-based study

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Comparative Study

Long-term prognosis for symptomatic (secondarily) generalized epilepsies: a population-based study

Peter Camfield et al. Epilepsia. 2007 Jun.

Abstract

Purpose: To describe the long-term outcome of childhood-onset secondarily generalized epilepsies (SGEs).

Methods: Children were identified from the Nova Scotia population-based epilepsy study (n=692). Onset of epilepsy was between 1977 and 1985, and follow-up was mainly in 2003. SGE was defined as having a mixture of more than one generalized seizure types including myoclonus, akinetic/atonic, tonic, or atypical absence, plus an interictal EEG with generalized spike-wave (irregular or slow) and/or multifocal spikes.

Results: SGE was identified in 80 children, 11.6% (80 of 692) of all childhood epilepsy. Forty percent did not fit into a currently accepted syndrome (such as Lennox-Gastaut, myoclonic-astatic or West). Seizure onset was in the first year of life in 60%, with only 9% later free of intellectual or physical handicap. Sixty-five percent (11 of 17) with Lennox-Gastaut had preceding West syndrome. During a median follow-up of 20 years, mortality was 24% (n=19), and 53% (n=42) had persistently intractable seizures. Surprisingly, 22 (28%) had >or=5 years of terminal remission (West, 31%, 10 of 32; Lennox-Gastaut, 0, none of four; myoclonic-astatic, 56%, five of nine; undefined, 31%, 10 of 32). At the end of follow-up, nearly 90% of patients fell into one of three outcome categories: death, 19 (24%); alive with intractable epilepsy, 31 (39%); or in remission for >or=5 years, 21 (26%).

Conclusions: Many children with SGE have ill-defined epilepsy syndromes. SGE is characterized by early age at onset, high rates of handicap, intractability, and death, although one third achieve complete seizure control with a long terminal remission.

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