Rolandic epilepsy has little effect on adult life 30 years later
A population-based study
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Abstract
Objective: To establish the adult social outcome for childhood-onset rolandic epilepsy.
Methods: Patients with medication-treated rolandic epilepsy were identified from the Nova Scotia prospective population-based cohort of childhood-onset epilepsy. Epilepsy onset was in 1977–1985 and follow-up was in 2010–2013 with chart review plus structured telephone interview for those older than 21 years.
Results: Forty-two children developed rolandic epilepsy (6% of 692 incident epilepsy cases in the cohort). Thirty-two (76%) were contacted when they were older than 21 years. Epilepsy onset averaged 7.7 ± 2.3 years, follow-up 29.5 ± 2.8 years, and final age 37 ± 3.4 years. All had epilepsy remission and were off antiepileptic drug treatment for 21.4 ± 6.6 years. There were 2 minor injuries from seizures and only 1 death (from a snowmobile accident). Overall, 41% had ≥1 of 7 adverse social outcomes, 6 had 1, 4 had 2, and 3 had ≥3. These were failure to complete high school (n = 7), pregnancy outside of a stable relationship (<6 months) (n = 7), depression or other psychiatric diagnosis (n = 3), unemployment (n = 1), living alone (n = 5), never in a romantic relationship >3 months (n = 1), and poverty (n = 2). Those who did not complete high school were more likely to have parents with low academic achievement and/or low income (p < 0.02). By comparison, rates of ≥1 adverse social outcomes for other epilepsies with normal intelligence from this cohort varied from 62% to 76%.
Conclusions: The adult social outcome for children with rolandic epilepsy is remarkably better than for those with other major epilepsies and normal intelligence.
GLOSSARY
- AED=
- antiepileptic drug;
- IGE-GTC=
- idiopathic generalized epilepsy with generalized tonic-clonic seizures
Footnotes
Go to Neurology.org for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.
↵* Both authors contributed equally to this work.
- Received September 1, 2013.
- Accepted in final form December 19, 2013.
- © 2014 American Academy of Neurology
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