Gaínza-Lein M, Barcia Aguilar C, Piantino J, Chapman KE, Sánchez Fernández I, Amengual-Gual M, Anderson A, Appavu B, Arya R, Brenton JN, Carpenter JL, Clark J, Farias-Moeller R, Gaillard WD, Glauser TA, Goldstein JL, Goodkin HP, Huh L, Kahoud R, Kapur K, Lai YC, McDonough TL, Mikati MA, Morgan LA, Nayak A, Novotny E Jr, Ostendorf AP, Payne ET, Peariso K, Reece L, Riviello J, Sannagowdara K, Sands TT, Sheehan T, Tasker RC, Tchapyjnikov D, Vasquez A, Wainwright MS, Wilfong A, Williams K, Zhang B, Loddenkemper T; Pediatric Status Epilepticus Research Group. Factors associated with long-term outcomes in pediatric refractory status epilepticus. Epilepsia. 2021 Jul 12. doi: 10.1111/epi.16984. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 34251039.
Abstract
Objective: This study was undertaken to describe long-term clinical and
developmental outcomes in pediatric refractory status epilepticus (RSE) and
identify factors associated with new neurological deficits after RSE.
Methods: We performed retrospective analyses of prospectively collected
observational data from June 2011 to March 2020 on pediatric patients with RSE.
We analyzed clinical outcomes from at least 30 days after RSE and, in a
subanalysis, we assessed developmental outcomes and evaluated risk factors in previously
normally developed patients.
Results: Follow-up data on outcomes were available in 276 patients (56.5%
males). The median (interquartile range [IQR]) follow-up duration was 1.6
(.9-2.7) years. The in-hospital mortality rate was 4% (16/403 patients), and 15
(5.4%) patients had died after hospital discharge. One hundred sixty-six
(62.9%) patients had subsequent unprovoked seizures, and 44 (16.9%) patients
had a repeated RSE episode. Among 116 patients with normal development before
RSE, 42 of 107 (39.3%) patients with available data had new neurological
deficits (cognitive, behavioral, or motor). Patients with new deficits had
longer median (IQR) electroclinical RSE duration than patients without new
deficits (10.3 [2.1-134.5] h vs. 4 [1.6-16] h, p = .011, adjusted odds ratio =
1.003, 95% confidence interval = 1.0008-1.0069, p = .027). The proportion of
patients with an unfavorable functional outcome (Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended
score ≥ 4) was 22 of 90 (24.4%), and they were more likely to have received a
continuous infusion.
Significance: About one third of patients without prior
epilepsy developed recurrent unprovoked seizures after the RSE episode. In
previously normally developing patients, 39% presented with new deficits during
follow-up, with longer electroclinical RSE duration as a predictor.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/journal-summary/factors-associated-with-long-term-outcomes-in-pediatric-refractory-status-epilepticus/5BxhSzlHnAaLAWptpvlQsp
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