Factors predicting prognosis of epilepsy after presentation with seizures
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Unique Identifier
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11117539 |
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Medline Identifier
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21003601
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Authors
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MacDonald BK. Johnson AL. Goodridge DM. Cockerell OC. Sander JW. Shorvon SD.
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Institution
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Institute of Neurology, National Hospital of Neurology and Neurosurgery, London,
UK.
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Title
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Factors predicting prognosis of epilepsy after presentation with seizures.
[erratum appears in Ann Neurol 2001 Apr;49(4):547].
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Source
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Annals of Neurology. 48(6):833-41, 2000 Dec.
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Abstract
The objective of this study was to identify the factors, at the time of diagnosis,
that determine the prognosis for remission of epilepsy. A prospective community-based
cohort study of 792 patients recruited at the time of their first diagnosis of
epileptic seizures was undertaken; in those classified 6 months after presentation,
the median follow-up period was 7.2 years (quartiles at 6.2 and 8.2 years) after
presentation. We analyzed data from 6 months after the first identified seizure,
which prompted the diagnosis of epilepsy, to allow us to factor in those aspects
contingent on a diagnostic assessment Baseline clinical and demographic data were
analyzed using the Cox proportional hazards regression model with remission of
epilepsy for 1, 2, 3, and 5 years as outcome measures. The dominant clinical feature
predicting remission was the number of seizures in the 6-month diagnostic assessment
period. Thus, the chance of entering 1 year of remission by 6 years for a patient
who had 2 seizures during this initial 6 months was 95%; for 5 years of remission,
it was 47% as opposed to 75% for 1 year of remission and 24% for 5 years of remission
if there had been 10 or more seizures during this period. The number of seizures
in the early phase of epilepsy (here, taken as the first 6 months after presentation)
is the single most important predictive factor for both early and long-term remission
of seizures.
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