Krumholz Allan, Wiebe Samuel, Gronseth Gary S, Gloss David S, Sanchez Ana M, Kabir Arif A, Liferidge Aisha T, Martello Justin P, Kanner Andres M, Shinnar Shlomo, Hopp Jennifer L, French Jacqueline A
From the Department of Neurology, Maryland Epilepsy Center (A.K.), and Department of Neurology (A.M.S., A.A.K., J.P.M., J.L.H.), University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore; US Department of Veterans Affairs (A.K.), Maryland Healthcare System, Epilepsy Center of Excellence, Baltimore, MD; Department of Clinical Neuroscience (S.W.), University of Calgary Faculty of Medicine, Canada; Department of Neurology (G.S.G.), University of Kansas School of Medicine, Kansas City, KS; Department of Neurology (D.S.G.), Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA; Department of Emergency Medicine (A.T.L.), George Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, DC; Department of Neurology (A.M.K.), International Center for Epilepsy, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, FL; Departments of Neurology, Pediatrics, and Epidemiology & Population Health (S.S.), Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University, Bronx; and New York University Comprehensive Epilepsy Center (J.A.F.), New York, NY.
Neurology. 2015 Apr 21;84(16):1705-13. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000001487.
To provide evidence-based recommendations for treatment of adults with an unprovoked first seizure.
We defined relevant questions and systematically reviewed published studies according to the American Academy of Neurology's classification of evidence criteria; we based recommendations on evidence level.
Adults with an unprovoked first seizure should be informed that their seizure recurrence risk is greatest early within the first 2 years (21%-45%) (Level A), and clinical variables associated with increased risk may include a prior brain insult (Level A), an EEG with epileptiform abnormalities (Level A), a significant brain-imaging abnormality (Level B), and a nocturnal seizure (Level B). Immediate antiepileptic drug (AED) therapy, as compared with delay of treatment pending a second seizure, is likely to reduce recurrence risk within the first 2 years (Level B) but may not improve quality of life (Level C). Over a longer term (>3 years), immediate AED treatment is unlikely to improve prognosis as measured by sustained seizure remission (Level B). Patients should be advised that risk of AED adverse events (AEs) may range from 7% to 31% (Level B) and that these AEs are likely predominantly mild and reversible. Clinicians' recommendations whether to initiate immediate AED treatment after a first seizure should be based on individualized assessments that weigh the risk of recurrence against the AEs of AED therapy, consider educated patient preferences, and advise that immediate treatment will not improve the long-term prognosis for seizure remission but will reduce seizure risk over the subsequent 2 years.
为初发无诱因癫痫的成人患者治疗提供循证医学建议。
我们明确了相关问题,并根据美国神经病学学会的证据标准分类系统回顾已发表的研究;我们依据证据级别提出建议。
应告知初发无诱因癫痫的成人患者,其癫痫复发风险在发作后的头2年内最高(21%-45%)(A级证据),与风险增加相关的临床变量可能包括既往脑损伤(A级证据)、脑电图有癫痫样异常(A级证据)、明显的脑影像学异常(B级证据)以及夜间发作(B级证据)。与等待第二次发作再进行治疗相比,立即使用抗癫痫药物(AED)治疗可能会降低头2年内的复发风险(B级证据),但可能不会改善生活质量(C级证据)。从长期来看(>3年),以持续癫痫缓解来衡量,立即进行AED治疗不太可能改善预后(B级证据)。应告知患者,AED不良事件(AE)的风险可能在7%至31%之间(B级证据),并且这些AE可能主要是轻度且可逆的。临床医生对于首次发作后是否立即启动AED治疗的建议应基于个体化评估,权衡复发风险与AED治疗的AE,考虑患者的合理偏好,并告知患者立即治疗不会改善癫痫缓解的长期预后,但会降低随后2年的发作风险。