Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is a genetically determined epilepsy syndrome. It presents with myoclonic
SUMMARYPurpose: To count patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy entering early and late remission and to identify prognostic predictors of late remission. Methods: Children and adults with previously untreated epilepsy from two Italian tertiary centers (Monza, Bari) were the study population. All patients received monotherapy at treatment start; drug choice and schedule were left to the physician's judgment. A retrospective audit was performed and the following prognostic predictors were identified: age, gender, putative etiology, first electroencephalography (EEG) record, neurologic and psychiatric examination, disease duration at diagnosis, seizure type(s) and number prior to starting treatment, epilepsy syndrome, and first antiepileptic drug. Early remission was defined by 2-year seizure control immediately after treatment start. Late remission was defined by 2-year seizure control achieved at least 24 months after treatment start. Prognostic predictors were assessed by logistic regression analysis, adjusting for age, gender, and center. Results: One hundred seventy-four women and 178 men (mean age 31.5 years) were included and followed for 2399.6 person-years. The cumulative time-dependent probability of 2-year remission was 56.3% at 2 years after treatment start, and 62.6, 69.4, and 79.5% at 3, 5, and 10 years. One hundred fifteen patients (23.0%) achieved early remission and 38 patients (10.8%) achieved late remission. The interaction between partial seizures and number of seizures prior to treatment was the only independent predictor of late remission. Discussion: The course of epilepsy and the chance of remission are together a complex and dynamic process, possibly explained by the diversity of the mechanisms underlying drug response and the use of an increasing number of drugs.
Summary Objective Although many studies have attempted to describe treatment outcomes in patients with drug‐resistant epilepsy, results are often limited by the adoption of nonhomogeneous criteria and different definitions of seizure freedom. We sought to evaluate treatment outcomes with a newly administered antiepileptic drug (AED) in a large population of adults with drug‐resistant focal epilepsy according to the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) outcome criteria. Methods This is a multicenter, observational, prospective study of 1053 patients with focal epilepsy diagnosed as drug‐resistant by the investigators. Patients were assessed at baseline and 6, 12, and 18 months, for up to a maximum of 34 months after introducing another AED into their treatment regimen. Drug resistance status and treatment outcomes were rated according to ILAE criteria by the investigators and by at least two independent members of an external expert panel (EP). Results A seizure‐free outcome after a newly administered AED according to ILAE criteria ranged from 11.8% after two failed drugs to 2.6% for more than six failures. Significantly fewer patients were rated by the EP as having a “treatment failure” as compared to the judgment of the investigator (46.7% vs 62.9%, P < 0.001), because many more patients were rated as “undetermined outcome” (45.6% vs 27.7%, P < 0.001); 19.3% of the recruited patients were not considered drug‐resistant by the EP. Significance This study validates the use of ILAE treatment outcome criteria in a real‐life setting, providing validated estimates of seizure freedom in patients with drug‐resistant focal epilepsy in relation to the number of previously failed AEDs. Fewer than one in 10 patients achieved seizure freedom on a newly introduced AED over the study period. Pseudo drug resistance could be identified in one of five cases.
Objective:To identify novel genes implicated in epilepsy with auditory features (EAF) in phenotypically heterogeneous families with unknown molecular basis.Methods:We identified 15 probands with EAF in whom an LGI1 mutation had been excluded. We performed electroclinical phenotyping on all probands and available affected relatives. We used whole-exome sequencing (WES) in 20 individuals with EAF (including all the probands and 5 relatives) to identify single nucleotide variants, small insertions/deletions, and copy number variants.Results:WES revealed likely pathogenic variants in genes that had not been previously associated with EAF: a CNTNAP2 intragenic deletion, 2 truncating mutations of DEPDC5, and a missense SCN1A change.Conclusions:EAF is a clinically and molecularly heterogeneous disease. The association of EAF with CNTNAP2, DEPDC5, and SCN1A mutations widens the phenotypic spectrum related to these genes. CNTNAP2 encodes CASPR2, a member of the voltage-gated potassium channel complex in which LGI1 plays a role. The finding of a CNTNAP2 deletion emphasizes the importance of this complex in EAF and shows biological convergence.
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