Factors associated with comorbid epilepsy in patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures: A large cohort study
- PMID: 35753900
- DOI: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2022.108780
Factors associated with comorbid epilepsy in patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures: A large cohort study
Abstract
Objective: Comorbid epilepsy and psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) occur in 12-22% of cases and the diagnosis of both simultaneous disorders is challenging. We aimed to identify baseline characteristics that may help distinguish patients with PNES-only from those with comorbid epilepsy.
Methods: We performed a longitudinal cohort study on those patients diagnosed with PNES in our epilepsy monitoring unit (EMU) between May 2001 and February 2011, prospectively followed up until September 2016. Patients were classified into PNES-only, PNES + possible or probable epilepsy, and PNES + definite epilepsy based on the clinical, vEEG, and neuroimaging data. Demographic and basal clinical data were obtained from chart review. Multiple regression models were performed to identify significant predictors of PNES + definite epilepsy, excluding patients with only possible or probable epilepsy for this specific analysis.
Results: One-hundred and ninety four patients with PNES-only, 30 with PNES + possible or probable epilepsy and 47 with PNES + definite epilepsy were included. 73.8% were female and the mean age at EMU admission was 37.4 ± standard deviation 13.5 years. Patients with PNES + definite epilepsy most likely had never worked, had history of febrile seizures, structural brain lesions, developmental disabilities, and maximum reported seizure duration between 0.5 and 2 min. Patients with PNES-only were on fewer anti-seizure medications (ASM), reported more frequently an initial minor head trauma, seizures longer than 10 min, and a higher number of neurological and medical illnesses - being migraine (18.1%), other types of headaches (18.5%), and asthma (15.5%) the most prevalent ones. All p < 0.05. On the hierarchical regression analysis, history of febrile seizures, developmental disabilities, brain lesions, longest reported seizure duration between 0.5 and 2 min, and lack of neurological comorbidity, remained as significant predictors of PNES + epilepsy. The model's performance of a 5-fold cross-validation analysis showed an overall accuracy of 84.7% to classify patients correctly.
Conclusions: Some demographic and clinical characteristics may support the presence of comorbid epilepsy in patients with PNES, being unemployment, the presence of brain lesions, developmental disabilities, history of febrile seizures, seizure duration and lack of comorbid headaches the most relevant ones.
Keywords: Conversive disorder; Dissociative seizures; Functional neurological disorder; Functional seizures; Pseudoseizures; Psychogenic non-epileptic attacks; Video-EEG.
Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of Competing Interest A. Massot-Tarrús has received honoraria for speaking engagements and advisory boards from Bial, Eisai, UCB Pharma and GW pharmaceuticals, and research support from Eisai and UCB. He has been involved in multiple multi-center clinical trials unrelated to PNES. S.M. Mirsattari is on the advisory boards and speaker bureaus for UCB Canada Inc., Eisai Limited, and Sunovion Pharmaceuticals Canada, Inc. He has been involved in multiple multi-center clinical trials unrelated to PNES. Yeyao Joe Yu and Mashael AlKhateeb have no conflicts of interest or disclosures to report.
Comment in
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Functional seizures with comorbid epilepsy: Uncommon but tricky.Epilepsy Behav. 2022 Sep;134:108791. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2022.108791. Epub 2022 Jun 23. Epilepsy Behav. 2022. PMID: 35752575 No abstract available.
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