Cumulative Incidence of Seizures and Epilepsy in Ten-Year-Old Children Born Before 28 Weeks' Gestation
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Objective: We evaluated the incidence of seizures and epilepsy in the first decade of life among children born extremely premature (less than 28 weeks' gestation).
Method: In a prospective, multicenter, observational study, 889 of 966 eligible children born in 2002 to 2004 were evaluated at two and ten years for neurological morbidity. Complementing questionnaire data to determine a history of seizures, all caregivers were interviewed retrospectively for postneonatal seizures using a validated seizure screen followed by a structured clinical interview by a pediatric epileptologist. A second pediatric epileptologist established an independent diagnosis based on recorded responses of the interview. A third epileptologist determined the final diagnosis when evaluators disagreed (3%). Life table survival methods were used to estimate seizure incidence through ten years.
Results: By age ten years, 12.2% (95% confidence interval: 9.8, 14.5) of children had experienced one or more seizures, 7.6% (95% confidence interval: 5.7, 9.5) had epilepsy, 3.2% had seizure with fever, and 1.3% had a single, unprovoked seizure. The seizure incidence increased with decreasing gestational age. In more than 75% of children with seizures, onset was after one year of age. Seizure incidence was comparable in both sexes. Two-thirds of those with epilepsy had other neurological disorders. One third of children with epilepsy were not recorded on the medical history questionnaire.
Significance: The incidence of epilepsy through age ten years among children born extremely premature is approximately 7- to 14-fold higher than the 0.5% to 1% lifetime incidence reported in the general pediatric population. Seizures in this population are under-recognized, and possibly underdiagnosed, by parents and providers.
Alyoubi R, Abu-Zaid A Medicina (Kaunas). 2024; 60(11).
PMID: 39596993 PMC: 11596662. DOI: 10.3390/medicina60111809.
Retinopathy of prematurity and neurodevelopmental outcome and quality of life at 10 years of age.
Sriram S, Jensen E, Msall M, Yi J, Zhabotynsky V, Joseph R Res Sq. 2024; .
PMID: 38766141 PMC: 11100895. DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-4324566/v1.
Call C, Oran A, OShea T, Jensen E, Frazier J, Vaidya R Front Pediatr. 2024; 12:1359270.
PMID: 38550629 PMC: 10972878. DOI: 10.3389/fped.2024.1359270.
Comparing autism phenotypes in children born extremely preterm and born at term.
Joseph R, Lai E, Bishop S, Yi J, Bauman M, Frazier J Autism Res. 2023; 16(3):653-666.
PMID: 36595641 PMC: 10551822. DOI: 10.1002/aur.2885.
Environmental influences on child health outcomes: cohorts of individuals born very preterm.
OShea T, McGrath M, Aschner J, Lester B, Santos Jr H, Marsit C Pediatr Res. 2022; 93(5):1161-1176.
PMID: 35948605 PMC: 9363858. DOI: 10.1038/s41390-022-02230-5.