Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA.
Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA.
Epilepsy Behav. 2020 Dec;113:107475. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2020.107475. Epub 2020 Nov 11.
Depression has long been recognized as a comorbidity of epilepsy in high-income countries, ranging from 17 to 49% of people with epilepsy (PWE). Of the limited studies from sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where most people have uncontrolled seizures, an even higher prevalence of depression is reported among PWE at times exceeding 80%. We sought to assess the prevalence and severity of depression and its associated factors among PWE in Guinea, a sub-Saharan West African country where most PWE have poorly controlled seizures.
People with epilepsy from the community, age 16 years old and above, were consecutively recruited into a convenience cohort at the Ignace Deen Hospital in the capital city, Conakry, in summer 2018 as part of a larger study characterizing PWE in Guinea. Each participant was evaluated by a team of Guinean physicians and a U.S.-based neurologist to confirm the diagnosis of epilepsy. Inperson interviews were performed to measure demographic, clinical, socioeconomic, and related variables. Depression was measured via the Patient Health Questionniare-9 in the language of the participant's preference with a cutoff of 5 or more points being categorized as depressed. Regression analyses were performed to measure the associations between explanatory variables with the outcome of depression.
Of 140 PWE (age range: 16-66 years old; 64 female; 64% taking an antiseizure medication including 28% carbamazepine, 16% phenobarbital, and 14% valproic acid; duration of epilepsy: 11 years; 71% with one or more seizures in the past month; 17% never treated with an antiseizure medication; 90% with loss of consciousness during seizures; 10% without formal education; 31% with university level education; 62% using tap water; 48% with a serious seizure-related injury), the point prevalence of depression was 66% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 58%-74%): 43% of PWE had mild depression, 19% moderate, 4% moderate to severe, and 0.1% severe. In a multivariate analysis, the occurrence of a seizure in the past month (odds ratio: 3.03, 95% CI: 2.63-3.48, p = 0.01) was associated with depression, while gender, self-perceived stigma score, serious injuries, and the number of antiseizure medications taken were not statistically significantly associated (p > 0.05). Twenty-five percent of all participants endorsed thoughts of self-harm or suicidality.
Two-thirds of PWE in Guinea had depression in this single-institution convenience cohort. The presence of a seizure in the last month was the factor most associated with depression and is modifiable in many PWE. The high prevalance of depression suggests that screening and addressing depressive symptoms should be incorporated into routine epilepsy care in Guinea.
在高收入国家,抑郁症一直被认为是癫痫的一种合并症,癫痫患者(PWE)中有 17%至 49%患有抑郁症。在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)的有限研究中,大多数人癫痫发作无法得到控制,PWE 中报告的抑郁症患病率更高,有时甚至超过 80%。我们试图评估在几内亚这个撒哈拉以南的西非国家中,PWE 中抑郁症的患病率和严重程度及其相关因素,那里大多数 PWE 的癫痫发作都无法得到很好的控制。
2018 年夏季,在首都科纳克里的伊格纳斯·德恩医院,我们连续招募了来自社区的年龄在 16 岁及以上的癫痫患者,加入了一个更大的描述几内亚 PWE 的研究中的便利队列。每个参与者都由一组几内亚医生和一名美国神经病学家进行评估,以确认癫痫的诊断。通过参与者首选的语言进行面对面访谈,以测量人口统计学、临床、社会经济和相关变量。使用患者健康问卷-9 测量抑郁症,得分 5 分或以上者被归类为抑郁。进行回归分析以测量解释变量与抑郁症结果之间的关联。
在 140 名 PWE(年龄范围:16-66 岁;64 名女性;64%正在服用抗癫痫药物,包括 28%的卡马西平、16%的苯巴比妥和 14%的丙戊酸;癫痫持续时间:11 年;71%在过去一个月有一次或多次发作;17%从未接受过抗癫痫药物治疗;90%在发作期间失去意识;10%没有接受过正规教育;31%受过大学教育;62%使用自来水;48%有严重的与发作相关的损伤)中,抑郁症的时点患病率为 66%(95%置信区间[CI]:58%-74%):43%的 PWE 患有轻度抑郁症,19%患有中度抑郁症,4%患有中重度抑郁症,0.1%患有重度抑郁症。在多变量分析中,过去一个月有发作(比值比:3.03,95%CI:2.63-3.48,p=0.01)与抑郁症有关,而性别、自我感知的耻辱感评分、严重损伤和服用的抗癫痫药物数量与抑郁症无统计学显著相关性(p>0.05)。所有参与者中有 25%表示有自残或自杀念头。
在这个单机构便利队列中,几内亚的三分之二的 PWE 患有抑郁症。过去一个月内发作是与抑郁症最相关的因素,并且在许多 PWE 中是可以改变的。如此高的抑郁症患病率表明,在几内亚,应将抑郁症筛查和治疗纳入癫痫常规护理中。