Berg A T, Shinnar S, Levy S R, Testa F M, Smith-Rapaport S, Beckerman B, Ebrahimi N
Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois 60115, USA.
Epilepsia. 2001 Dec;42(12):1553-62. doi: 10.1046/j.1528-1157.2001.21101.x.
Although remission is the ultimate measure of seizure control in epilepsy, and epilepsy syndrome should largely determine this outcome, little is known about the relative importance of syndrome versus other factors traditionally examined as predictors of remission or of relapse after remission. The purpose of this study was to examine remission and relapse with respect to the epilepsy syndrome and other factors traditionally considered with respect to seizure outcome.
A prospectively identified cohort of 613 children with newly diagnosed epilepsy was assembled and is actively being followed to determine seizure outcomes. Epilepsy syndrome and etiology were classified at diagnosis and again 2 years later. Remission was defined as 2 years completely seizure-free, and relapse as the recurrence of seizures after remission. Multivariable analysis was performed with the Cox proportional hazards model.
Five hundred ninety-four of the original 613 children were followed > or = 2 years (median follow-up, 5 years). Remission occurred in 442 (74%), of whom 107 (24%) relapsed. On multivariable analysis, idiopathic generalized syndromes and age at onset between 5 and 9 years were associated with a substantially increased remission rate, whereas remote symptomatic etiology, family history of epilepsy, seizure frequency, and slowing on the initial EEG were associated with a decreased likelihood of attaining remission. Young onset age (<1 year) and seizure type were not important after adjustment for these predictors. Relapses occurred more often in association with focal slowing on the initial EEG and with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. Benign rolandic epilepsy and age at onset <1 year were associated with markedly lower risks of relapse. About one fourth of relapses were apparently spontaneous while the child was taking medication with good compliance, and more than half occurred in children who were tapering or had fully stopped medication.
A large proportion of children with epilepsy remit. Symptomatic etiology, family history, EEG slowing, and initial seizure frequency negatively influence, and age 5-9 years and idiopathic generalized epilepsy positively influence the probability of entering remission. Factors that most influence relapse tend to be different from those that influence remission.
尽管缓解是癫痫发作控制的最终衡量标准,且癫痫综合征在很大程度上应能决定这一结果,但对于综合征与传统上作为缓解预测因素或缓解后复发预测因素的其他因素相比的相对重要性,我们知之甚少。本研究的目的是探讨癫痫综合征及其他传统上与发作结果相关的因素与缓解和复发的关系。
前瞻性确定了一组613例新诊断癫痫的儿童,并对其进行积极随访以确定发作结果。在诊断时以及2年后再次对癫痫综合征和病因进行分类。缓解定义为2年无癫痫发作,复发定义为缓解后癫痫发作复发。使用Cox比例风险模型进行多变量分析。
最初的613例儿童中有594例随访时间≥2年(中位随访时间为5年)。442例(74%)实现缓解,其中107例(24%)复发。多变量分析显示,特发性全身性综合征以及发病年龄在5至9岁与缓解率大幅提高相关,而远期症状性病因、癫痫家族史、发作频率以及初始脑电图显示慢波则与实现缓解的可能性降低相关。在对这些预测因素进行调整后,发病年龄小(<1岁)和发作类型并不重要。复发更常与初始脑电图显示局灶性慢波以及青少年肌阵挛癫痫相关。良性罗兰多癫痫和发病年龄<1岁与复发风险显著降低相关。约四分之一的复发显然是在患儿依从性良好地服药期间自发发生的,超过一半的复发发生在正在逐渐减药或已完全停药的患儿中。
很大一部分癫痫儿童会实现缓解。症状性病因、家族史、脑电图慢波以及初始发作频率对进入缓解的概率有负面影响,而5至9岁年龄以及特发性全身性癫痫对进入缓解的概率有正面影响。对复发影响最大的因素往往与影响缓解的因素不同。