1. Factors associated with delay to video-EEG in dissociative seizures
- Author
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Corinne H. Allas, Jerome Engel, Emily A. Janio, Norma L. Gallardo, Sandra Dewar, Eric S. Hwang, Ishita Dubey, Justine M. Le, Siddhika S. Sreenivasan, Shannon R. D'Ambrosio, Chelsea T. Braesch, Andrew Y. Cho, Amir H. Karimi, Xingruo Zhang, John M. Stern, Andrea M. Chau, Chloe E. Hill, Emily C. Davis, Jessica M. Hori, Akash B. Patel, Janar Bauirjan, Wesley T. Kerr, Jamie D. Feusner, and Mona Al Banna
- Subjects
Adult ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Healthcare disparities ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures ,Neurodegenerative ,Dissociative ,Diagnostic delays ,Article ,PNEAD) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Seizures ,Clinical Research ,medicine ,Psychogenic disease ,Humans ,Functional seizures ,Psychogenic nonepileptic attack disorder ,Psychology ,Ictal ,Prospective Studies ,Medical diagnosis ,Child ,(PNEA ,Retrospective Studies ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,business.industry ,Seizure types ,Neurosciences ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Brain Disorders ,Physical abuse ,Good Health and Well Being ,Neurology ,Neurological ,Quality of Life ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose While certain clinical factors suggest a diagnosis of dissociative seizures (DS), otherwise known as functional or psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES), ictal video-electroencephalography monitoring (VEM) is the gold standard for diagnosis. Diagnostic delays were associated with worse quality of life and more seizures, even after treatment. To understand why diagnoses were delayed, we evaluated which factors were associated with delay to VEM. Methods Using data from 341 consecutive patients with VEM-documented dissociative seizures, we used multivariate log-normal regression with recursive feature elimination (RFE) and multiple imputation of some missing data to evaluate which of 76 clinical factors were associated with time from first dissociative seizure to VEM. Results The mean delay to VEM was 8.4 years (median 3 years, IQR 1–10 years). In the RFE multivariate model, the factors associated with longer delay to VEM included more past antiseizure medications (0.19 log-years/medication, standard error (SE) 0.05), more medications for other medical conditions (0.06 log-years/medication, SE 0.03), history of physical abuse (0.75 log-years, SE 0.27), and more seizure types (0.36 log-years/type, SE 0.11). Factors associated with shorter delay included active employment or student status (-1.05 log-years, SE 0.21) and higher seizure frequency (0.14 log-years/log[seizure/month], SE 0.06). Conclusions Patients with greater medical and seizure complexity had longer delays. Delays in multiple domains of healthcare can be common for victims of physical abuse. Unemployed and non-student patients may have had more barriers to access VEM. These results support earlier referral of complex cases to a comprehensive epilepsy center.
- Published
- 2021