Sinaei Farnaz, Josephson Colin B, Wiebe Samuel
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Epilepsia. 2025 Aug;66(8):2954-2965. doi: 10.1111/epi.18441. Epub 2025 May 5.
To explore how people with epilepsy self-characterize their diagnosis as being epilepsy, a seizure disorder, or neither.
People diagnosed with epilepsy by epileptologists, responded to two questions: "do you have epilepsy?" and "do you have a seizure disorder?". Demographic, clinical and patient-reported outcome measures were extracted from Calgary Comprehensive Epilepsy Program registry. Multivariable multinomial and logistic regression models were used to determine factors associated with self-perception of the diagnosis.
Of 1684 epilepsy patients who answered both questions, 1231 (73.1%) perceived themselves as having epilepsy, 137 (8.1%) a seizure disorder but not epilepsy, 145 (8.6%) neither of the diagnoses, and 171 (10.2%) as not knowing their diagnosis. On multivariate analyses, factors significantly associated with a higher likelihood of self-perception as having a seizure disorder versus epilepsy included having focal epilepsy (relative risk ratio [RRR] = 13.1, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.7-102.1), and a higher comorbidity burden (RRR = 1.8, 95% CI: 1.3-2.7), whereas self-perception of having a seizure disorder vs epilepsy was lower in females (RRR = .36, 95% CI: .14-.94) and those taking more antiseizure medications (ASMs) (RRR = .19, 95% CI: .06-.58). Self-perception of having neither diagnosis was significantly more likely in people with focal epilepsy (RRR = 3.1, 95% CI: 1.2-8.3) and a higher comorbidity burden (RRR = 1.6, 95% CI: 1.1-2.4), whereas the likelihood was lower with a longer duration of epilepsy (RRR = .96, 95% CI: .93-.99), taking a higher number of ASMs, (RRR = .14, 95% CI: .04-.51), having more side effects (RRR = .89, 95% CI: .83-.96), a higher self-rated severity of epilepsy (RRR = .26, 95% CI: .14-.49), and if the respondent was the patient as opposed to a proxy (RRR = .24, 95% CI: .07-.85).
In a clinical setting, clinical characteristics, rather than sociodemographic factors, largely explain how people with epilepsy self-characterize their diagnosis. Markers of higher seizure severity and longer illness duration increase the likelihood of self-perception as having epilepsy.
探讨癫痫患者如何自我认定其诊断为癫痫、发作性疾病或两者皆非。
由癫痫专家诊断为癫痫的患者回答两个问题:“你患有癫痫吗?”以及“你患有发作性疾病吗?”。从卡尔加里综合癫痫项目登记处提取人口统计学、临床和患者报告的结局指标。使用多变量多项和逻辑回归模型来确定与诊断自我认知相关的因素。
在回答了这两个问题的1684名癫痫患者中,1231人(73.1%)认为自己患有癫痫,137人(8.1%)认为患有发作性疾病但非癫痫,145人(8.6%)认为两者皆非,171人(10.2%)表示不知道自己的诊断。多变量分析显示,与自我认知为患有发作性疾病而非癫痫的可能性较高显著相关的因素包括患有局灶性癫痫(相对风险比[RRR]=13.1,95%置信区间[CI]:1.7 - 102.1)以及更高的合并症负担(RRR = 1.8,95% CI:1.3 - 2.7),而女性(RRR = 0.36,95% CI:0.14 - 0.94)和服用更多抗癫痫药物(ASMs)的患者(RRR = 0.19,95% CI:0.06 - 0.58)自我认知为患有发作性疾病而非癫痫的可能性较低。局灶性癫痫患者(RRR = 3.1,95% CI:1.2 - 八、3)和合并症负担较高的患者(RRR = 1.6,95% CI:1.1 - 2.4)自我认知为两者皆非的可能性显著更高,而癫痫病程较长(RRR = 0.96,95% CI:0.93 - 0.99)、服用更多ASMs(RRR = 0.14,95% CI:0.04 - 0.51)、有更多副作用(RRR = 0.89,95% CI:0.83 - 0.96)、自我评定的癫痫严重程度较高(RRR = 0.26,95% CI:0.14 - 0.49)以及受访者为患者而非代理人(RRR = 0.24,95% CI:0.07 - 0.85)时,自我认知为两者皆非的可能性较低。
在临床环境中,临床特征而非社会人口统计学因素在很大程度上解释了癫痫患者如何自我认定其诊断。发作严重程度较高和病程较长的指标会增加自我认知为患有癫痫的可能性。