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Brain Advance Access published online on January 9, 2006

Brain, doi:10.1093/brain/awh726
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© The Author (2006). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org
Received April 7, 2005
Revised October 11, 2005
Accepted November 25, 2005

Article

Natural history of treated childhood-onset epilepsy: prospective, long-term population-based study

Matti Sillanpää 1 and Dieter Schmidt 2 *

1 Department of Public Health, University of Turku, Turku, Finland; Department of Child Neurology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland
2 Epilepsy Research Group, Berlin, Germany

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Dieter Schmidt, E-mail: dbschmidt{at}t-online.de


   Abstract

It is not well known how often drug resistance, a major clinical problem, occurs early or late in the course of epilepsy and how often epilepsy follows a continuous, remitting or relapsing-remitting pattern. To provide evidence if, in fact, different patterns of evolution of drug resistance and remission exist, a prospective, long-term population-based study of 144 patients followed on the average for 37.0 years (SD 7.1, median 40.0, range 11-42) since their first seizure before the age of 16 years was performed. At the end of follow-up, 67% of 144 patients were in terminal remission, on or off antiepileptic drugs. Early remission, starting within the first year of treatment, was seen in 45 patients (31%). In 23 (16%) of them, first remission continued, uninterrupted by relapse, to terminal remission. Late remission with a mean delay of 9 years was achieved by a further 72 patients (50%), including 46 (32%) patients who achieved terminal remission without any relapse and suggested, together with 23 patients, a remitting course. Following a relapse after early or late remission, 28 (19%) patients achieved terminal remission, suggesting a remitting-relapsing pattern. Altogether 20 patients (14%) did not re-enter remission, indicating a worsening course of epilepsy. Twenty-seven (19%) patients were drug-resistant from the start to the end of follow-up. In conclusion, half the patients with childhood-onset epilepsy will eventually enter terminal remission without relapse and a fifth after relapse. One-third will have a poor long-term outcome in terms of persistent seizures after remission or without any remission ever.

Keywords: pharmacoresistance; drug resistance; antiepileptic drugs; clinical patterns; remission.
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