RESUMEN
PURPOSE: Studies concerning mortality in epilepsy have been performed primarily in Northern-Central Europe and US. The aim of this study was to provide information about mortality in people with epilepsy in Southern European countries. METHOD: We studied a Spanish prevalence and incidence cohort of 2309 patients aged ≥14 years with epilepsy who were treated in an outpatient epilepsy clinic between 2000 and 2013. The deceased were identified through Civil Registries. Causes of death were determined using death certificates, forensic autopsies, hospital reports, family practitioners, and care-givers' records. Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) were calculated. RESULTS: In a total of 15,865 person-years of follow-up, 152 patients died, resulting in an SMR of 2.11 (95% CI 1.79-2.47), which was higher for those aged 14-24. There was also a high rate of death for symptomatic epilepsies, progressive causes (SMR=6.12, CI 3.50-9.94), and remote causes (SMR=2.62, CI 2.12-3.21). High SMRs were found for all kinds of epilepsy and for respiratory and tumoural causes. Patients who died of epilepsy itself were 12.5%. Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy incidence was 0.44:1000. Death from status epilepticus incidence was 20:100,000. SMRs for external causes were of no statistical significance. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first epidemiological study to examine rate of mortality in epilepsy in a Southern European country. The identified mortality pattern is similar to the one provided by researchers from developed countries. The similarities between our results concerning epilepsy-related deaths and those provided by population-based studies are the result of the scarcely selected character of our study cohort.
Asunto(s)
Epilepsia/mortalidad , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Causas de Muerte , Certificado de Defunción , Muerte Súbita/epidemiología , Femenino , Estudios de Seguimiento , Humanos , Incidencia , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Prevalencia , España/epidemiología , Adulto JovenRESUMEN
INTRODUCTION: Tuberous sclerosis is a genetic disease, the main manifestations of which are the formation of neuroectodermal tumours, which are very often associated to secondary epilepsy. AIM: To describe the epileptic profile, control, frequency of seizures and effectiveness of treatment in adult patients with tuberous sclerosis. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The study was descriptive and included adult patients (over 14 years of age) with a confirmed diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis. Both the frequency and type of seizures were analysed. A study was conducted to analyse and record the number of different antiepileptic drugs in each patient and the frequency of use of each active ingredient, and the control of seizures and the type of therapy were also included in another comparative study. RESULTS: Of a total of 19 adults who were studied, 16 of them (84%) had epileptic seizures. Results showed that 44%, 25% and 31% of them presented full control of seizures, sporadic seizures and frequent seizures, respectively. A certain frequency of focal, general and both types of seizures existed in 38%, 6% and 25%, respectively. Likewise, 38%, 44% and 19% of them were under treatment with antiepileptic drugs in monotherapy, bitherapy and tritherapy, respectively. Overall, the most commonly consumed drug was levetiracetam, followed by carbamazepine and valproic acid. In monotherapy the most common was carbamazepine, with a higher proportion of full control. CONCLUSIONS: Epilepsy in tuberous sclerosis is relatively benign and an acceptable degree of control is achieved in most cases with a number of the antiepileptic drugs recommended in the treatment guidelines. In our series, we observed stability of involvement and there was no progression to a malignant status. The small number of individuals in the sample limits the study, but the proportions of treatment effectiveness are seen to be similar to those observed in another series published in the literature.
TITLE: Control de la epilepsia en pacientes adultos con esclerosis tuberosa.Introduccion. La esclerosis tuberosa es una enfermedad genetica cuyas manifestaciones principales son la formacion de tumores neuroectodermicos, que asocia epilepsia secundaria muy frecuentemente. Objetivo. Describir el perfil epileptico, el control, la frecuencia de crisis y la efectividad del tratamiento en pacientes adultos con esclerosis tuberosa. Pacientes y metodos. Estudio descriptivo en el que se han incluido pacientes adultos (mayores de 14 anos) con diagnostico confirmado de esclerosis tuberosa. Se ha analizado la frecuencia y tipos de crisis. Se ha realizado un estudio y contabilizacion de los diferentes farmacos antiepilepticos en cada paciente, la frecuencia de uso de cada principio activo y un estudio comparativo entre control de crisis y tipo de terapia. Resultados. De 19 adultos estudiados, tuvieron crisis epilepticas 16 (84%). Presentaron control de crisis completo, crisis esporadicas y crisis frecuentes el 44%, 25% y 31%, respectivamente. Hubo frecuencia de crisis focales, generalizadas y ambas en el 38%, 6% y 25%, respectivamente. Estaban en tratamiento con farmacos antiepilepticos en monoterapia, biterapia y triterapia el 38%, 44% y 19%, respectivamente. El mas consumido globalmente fue el levetiracetam, seguido de la carbamacepina y el acido valproico. En monoterapia, el mas frecuente fue la carbamacepina, con mayor proporcion de control completo. Conclusiones. La epilepsia en la esclerosis tuberosa es relativamente benigna, y se consigue un aceptable control en la mayoria de casos con un numero de antiepilepticos acorde con lo aconsejado en las guias de tratamiento. Se observa estabilidad de lesiones, y no hay malignizacion en nuestra serie. El bajo numero de la muestra limita el estudio, pero se observan proporciones similares de efectividad del tratamiento respecto a otra serie publicada.