PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Electroencephalography as a diagnostic tool for late-onset efavirenz neurotoxicity syndrome.

  • Sam Nightingale,
  • Salvatore Ssemmanda,
  • Lawrence M Tucker,
  • Roland W Eastman,
  • Eddy B Lee Pan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 11
p. e0288055

Abstract

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IntroductionTo examine electroencephalogram (EEG) as a diagnostic tool for late-onset efavirenz (EFV) neurotoxicity syndrome (LENS), an uncommon but severe and potentially fatal complication of EFV therapy.MethodsWe conducted a Retrospective case-control study. EEGs from confirmed cases of LENS (clinical syndrome and plasma EFV >4ug/mL) recorded from June 2016 to May 2021 were compared with control EEGs from the same time-period. Controls were adults (18-70 years) with a similar indication for EEG (eg. encephalopathy or confusion), dysrhythmia generalised grade II, and LENS excluded. EEGs were reviewed by two blinded interpreters given a description of the characteristic EEG changes, ie. persistent, diffuse, high voltage, bisynchronous, monomorphic 4-7 Hz theta frequency waveforms with transient attenuation on eye opening. Interpreters were asked to determine whether EEGs showed definite, probable or no changes.ResultsThirteen LENS cases were compared with 50 control EEGs. Interpreter 1 labelled 11/13 LENS cases as having define or probable changes, and interpreter 2 labelled 10/13. Interpreter 1 labelled probable changes in 1/50 controls and interpreter 2 in 3/50. Neither interpreter labelled any controls as having definite changes. Interrater reliability was good with 95% agreement and a Cohen's kappa of 0.83. Sensitivity of EEG under these conditions for the diagnosis of LENS was 85% and 77% for interpreters 1 and 2 respectively, and specificity was 98% and 94%.ConclusionsEEG is a useful tool in the diagnosis of LENS which can be used to aid clinical decisions while awaiting EFV levels, or in low-resource settings where EFV levels are not available.