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Is the First Seizure Epilepsy--and When?

Overview
Journal Epilepsia
Specialty Neurology
Date 2015 Jul 30
PMID 26222507
Citations 7
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Abstract

Objective: Epilepsy has recently been redefined to include a single unprovoked seizure if the probability of recurrence is ≥60% over the following 10 years. This definition is based on the estimated risk of a third seizure after two unprovoked seizures, using the lower-limit 95% confidence interval (CI) at 4 years, and does not account for the initially high recurrence rate after first-ever seizure that rapidly falls with increasing duration of seizure freedom. We analyzed long-term outcomes after the first-ever seizure, and the influence of duration of seizure freedom on the likelihood of seizure recurrence, and their relevance to the new definition of epilepsy.

Methods: Prospective analysis of 798 adults with a first-ever unprovoked seizure seen at a hospital-based first seizure clinic between 2000 and 2011. The likelihood of seizure recurrence was analyzed according to the duration of seizure freedom, etiology, electroencephalography (EEG), and neuroimaging findings.

Results: The likelihood of seizure recurrence at 10 years was ≥60% in patients with epileptiform abnormalities on EEG or neuroimaging abnormalities, therefore, meeting the new definition of epilepsy. However, the risk of recurrence was highly time dependent; after a brief period (≤12 weeks) of seizure freedom, no patient group continued to fulfill the new definition of epilepsy. Of 407 patients who had a second seizure, the likelihood of a third seizure at 4 years was 68% (95% CI 63-73%) and at 10 years was 85% (95% CI 79-91%).

Significance: The duration of seizure freedom following first-ever seizure substantially influences the risk of recurrence, with none of our patients fulfilling the new definition of epilepsy after a short period of seizure freedom. When a threshold was applied based on the 10-year risk of a third seizure from our data, no first-seizure patient group ever had epilepsy. These data may be utilized in a definition of epilepsy after a first-ever seizure.

Citing Articles

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Jenkins C, Cabrera A, Goldenholz D, Losey T, Baker N, Estes M Seizure. 2023; 108:96-101.

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Prognosis of adults and children following a first unprovoked seizure.

Neligan A, Adan G, Nevitt S, Pullen A, Sander J, Bonnett L Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2023; 1:CD013847.

PMID: 36688481 PMC: 9869434. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD013847.pub2.


Risk of seizure recurrence in people with single seizures and early epilepsy - Model development and external validation.

Bonnett L, Kim L, Johnson A, Sander J, Lawn N, Beghi E Seizure. 2021; 94:26-32.

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Zelano J Epilepsia Open. 2021; 6(4):634-644.

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Newly diagnosed seizures assessed at two established first seizure clinics: Clinic characteristics, investigations, and findings over 11 years.

McIntosh A, Tan K, Hakami T, Newton M, Carney P, Yang M Epilepsia Open. 2021; 6(1):171-180.

PMID: 33681660 PMC: 7918310. DOI: 10.1002/epi4.12460.