Factors Affecting Cognition and Depression in Adult Patients with Epilepsy.

Journal of epilepsy research Pub Date : 2019-12-31 eCollection Date: 2019-12-01 DOI:10.14581/jer.19018
Jaishree Narayanan, Kelly Claire Simon, Janet Choi, Sofia Dobrin, Susan Rubin, Jesse Taber, Charles Wang, Anna Pham, Richard Chesis, Bryce Hadsell, Alexander Epshteyn, Gary Wilk, Samuel Tideman, Steven Meyers, Roberta Frigerio, Demetrius Maraganore
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Abstract

Background and purpose: Epilepsy patients are more likely to experience depressive symptoms and cognitive impairment compared to individuals in the general population. As the reasons for this are not definitively known, we sought to determine what factors correlate most strongly with cognition and a screening test for depression in epilepsy patients.

Methods: Our study population included 379 adult patients diagnosed with epilepsy or seizure in our neurology clinic. We collected detailed demographic and clinical data during patient visits using structured clinical documentation support tools that we have built within our commercial electronic medical records system (Epic), including a depression score (Neurological Disorders Depression Inventory for Epilepsy, NDDIE) and cognition score test measures (specifically in this study, Mini-Mental State Examination [MMSE]). Medication, age, gender, body mass index, duration of epilepsy, seizure frequency, current number of anti-epileptic medications, years of education were assessed in relation to baseline score as well as change in score from initial visit to first annual follow-up.

Results: Of the analyzed factors, two statistically significant associations were found after correction for multiple testing. Male gender and lower anti-seizure medication count were associated with better mood, as assessed by NDDIE score, at initial visit. Specifically, male gender was associated with a 1.3 decrease in NDDIE and for each additional anti-seizure medication, there was an associated 1.2 increase in NDDIE.

Conclusions: However, these factors were not associated with change in NDDIE score from initial to first annual follow-up visit. These findings, although interesting, are preliminary. Additionally, these findings were based on a homogenous (mainly Caucasian) clinic-based population and detailed information on previous medication use was lacking. Further work is needed to replicate these findings and to understand any mechanisms that may explain these associations.

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影响成年癫痫患者认知和抑郁的因素。
背景和目的:与普通人群相比,癫痫患者更容易出现抑郁症状和认知障碍。由于尚不清楚造成这种情况的原因,我们试图确定哪些因素与癫痫患者的认知能力和抑郁症筛查测试最密切相关:我们的研究对象包括 379 名在神经内科门诊确诊为癫痫或癫痫发作的成年患者。在患者就诊期间,我们使用我们在商业电子病历系统(Epic)中建立的结构化临床文档支持工具收集了详细的人口统计学和临床数据,包括抑郁评分(癫痫神经系统疾病抑郁量表,NDDIE)和认知评分测试测量(特别是在本研究中的迷你精神状态检查[MMSE])。评估了药物、年龄、性别、体重指数、癫痫持续时间、癫痫发作频率、目前服用的抗癫痫药物数量、受教育年限与基线得分的关系,以及从初诊到首次年度随访的得分变化:结果:在分析的因素中,经多重检验校正后发现有两个因素在统计学上有显著关联。男性性别和较少的抗癫痫药物用量与初次就诊时较好的情绪(以 NDDIE 分数评估)有关。具体来说,男性与 NDDIE 下降 1.3 相关,而每增加一种抗癫痫药物,NDDIE 就会增加 1.2:然而,这些因素与首次年度随访到首次年度随访的 NDDIE 分数变化无关。这些发现虽然有趣,但还只是初步的。此外,这些研究结果是基于同质化的(主要是白种人)诊所人群得出的,而且缺乏有关既往用药情况的详细信息。我们还需要做更多的工作来复制这些发现,并了解可能解释这些关联的任何机制。
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