PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

The Natural History of Epilepsy in 163 Untreated Patients: Looking for "Oligoepilepsy".

  • Sara Gasparini,
  • Edoardo Ferlazzo,
  • Cinzia Grazia Leonardi,
  • Vittoria Cianci,
  • Laura Mumoli,
  • Chiara Sueri,
  • Angelo Labate,
  • Antonio Gambardella,
  • Umberto Aguglia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161722
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. e0161722

Abstract

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The clinical evolution of untreated epilepsy has been rarely studied in developed countries, and the existence of a distinct syndrome characterized by rarely repeated seizures (oligoepilepsy) is debated. The aim of this study is to assess the natural history of 163 untreated patients with epilepsy in order to evaluate whether oligoepilepsy retains specific features. We retrospectively evaluated 7344 patients with ≥2 unprovoked seizures. INCLUSION CRITERIA:sufficient anamnestic/EEG data, disease duration ≥10 years, follow-up ≥3 years. EXCLUSION CRITERIA:psychogenic seizures, natural history of disease 1/year; 116 subjects). We also evaluated seizure frequency during the natural history. There were no differences between groups regarding duration of natural history, family history of epilepsy/febrile seizures, interictal EEG. Subjects with oligoepilepsy differed from controls in terms of sex (females 38% vs. 58%, p = 0.03) and drug resistance (6% vs 28%; p = 0.003). Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy was more frequent in controls (9.5% vs 0%, p = 0.04). Patients with oligoepilepsy, differently from controls, had stable seizure frequency. Oligoepilepsy represents a favourable evolution of different epileptic syndromes and keeps a stable seizure frequency over time.