4.5 Article

Social outcome and psychiatric comorbidity of generalized epilepsies - A case-control study

期刊

EPILEPSIA
卷 62, 期 5, 页码 1158-1169

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/epi.16870

关键词

Idiopathic; genetic generalized epilepsy; impulsivity; juvenile myoclonic epilepsy; seizure freedom; social outcome

资金

  1. Novo Nordisk Fonden [NNF16OC0019126]
  2. Danish Epilepsy Association
  3. Region Midtjylland

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Patients with idiopathic/genetic generalized epilepsies (IGEs) have lower social status, education level, income, and employment rate, as well as a higher proportion of psychiatric comorbidity, compared to matched population controls. Among different IGE subtypes, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) patients show the poorest social status, while patients with epilepsy with generalized tonic-clonic seizures alone (EGTCS) and juvenile absence epilepsy (JAE) do not show adverse social outcomes. Poor seizure control is associated with negative socioeconomic consequences related to IGE.
Objective To investigate social outcome and psychiatric comorbidity of patients with idiopathic/genetic generalized epilepsies (IGEs) and its subtypes (epilepsy with generalized tonic-clonic seizures alone [EGTCS], juvenile absence epilepsy [JAE], and juvenile myoclonic epilepsy [JME]). Methods A cohort of 402 adult patients with IGE from the Danish island Funen was matched with 4020 randomly selected geography-, age-, and sex-matched controls via the Danish Civil Registration System. Based on register data, we compared social status measured by cohabitant status, educational attainment, income, affiliation to labor market, and psychiatric comorbidity. Results As compared to controls, patients with IGE had similar cohabitant status but fewer children (no children: 59.0% vs 50.9%), and lower educational level (primary school only: 46.0% vs 37.3%), employment rate (outside of workforce: 56.7% vs 46.5%), and income (low income: 32.6% vs 24.9%) (P < 0.001 for all comparisons). Having IGE was associated with higher a proportion of psychiatric comorbidity (IGE, 22.6%; controls, 13.0%) (P < 0.001). Seizure-free patients did not differ from controls; patients with persistent seizures had lower incomes and employment rates. In the IGE subgroup analyses, JME was associated with worse social status in all parameters studied (eg, 65.9% of JME patients were outside the workforce vs 44.5% of matched controls; P < 0.001), whereas no adverse social status was identified in patients with EGTCS and JAE. Significance Patients with IGE in general and JME in particular have poorer social status and more psychiatric comorbidity than matched population controls without epilepsy. Poor seizure control was associated with social status and may contribute to negative socioeconomic consequences associated with IGE.

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