81 results on '"Grinspan ZM"'
Search Results
2. Clinical trials for Lennox-Gastaut syndrome: Challenges and priorities.
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Knowles JK, Warren AEL, Mohamed IS, Stafstrom CE, Koh HY, Samanta D, Shellhaas RA, Gupta G, Dixon-Salazar T, Tran L, Bhatia S, McCabe JM, Patel AD, and Grinspan ZM
- Abstract
Objective: Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS) is a severe, childhood-onset epilepsy that is typically refractory to treatment. We surveyed the current landscape of LGS treatment, aiming to identify challenges to the development of efficacious therapies, and to articulate corresponding priorities toward clinical trials that improve outcomes., Methods: The LGS Special Interest Group of the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Consortium integrated evidence from the literature and expert opinion, into a narrative review., Results: We provide an overview of approved and emerging medical, dietary, surgical and neuromodulation approaches for LGS. We note that quality of care could be improved by standardizing LGS treatment based on expert consensus and empirical data. Whereas LGS natural history is incompletely understood, prospective studies and use of large retrospective datasets to understand LGS across the lifespan would enable clinical trials that address these dynamics. Recent discoveries related to LGS pathophysiology should enable development of disease-modifying therapies, which are currently lacking. Finally, clinical trials have focused chiefly on seizures involving "drops," but should incorporate additional patient-centered outcomes, using emerging measures adapted to people with LGS., Interpretation: Clinicians and researchers should enact these priorities, with the goal of patient-centered clinical trials that are tailored to LGS pathophysiology and natural history., (© 2024 The Author(s). Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Neurological Association.)
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- 2024
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3. Population-based study of rare epilepsy incidence in a US urban population.
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Barbour K, Tian N, Yozawitz EG, Wolf S, McGoldrick PE, Sands TT, Nelson A, Basma N, and Grinspan ZM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Infant, Child, Incidence, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, New York City epidemiology, Infant, Newborn, United States epidemiology, Epilepsy epidemiology, Epilepsy genetics, Urban Population statistics & numerical data
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Objective: This study was undertaken to estimate incidence of rare epilepsies and compare with literature., Methods: We used electronic health record text search to identify children with 28 rare epilepsies in New York City (2010-2014). We estimated cumulative incidence and compared with literature., Results: Eight of 28 rare epilepsies had five or more prior estimates, and our measurements were within the published range for all. The most common were infantile epileptic spasms syndrome (1 in 2920 live births), Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (1 in 9690), and seizures associated with tuberous sclerosis complex (1 in 14 300). Fifteen of 28 had fewer than five prior estimates, and of these, we provided additional estimates for early infantile developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (1 in 32 700), epilepsy with myoclonic-atonic seizures (1 in 34 100), Sturge-Weber syndrome plus seizures/epilepsy (1 in 40 900), epilepsy in infancy with migrating focal seizures (1 in 54 500), Aicardi syndrome plus seizures/epilepsy (1 in 71 600), hypothalamic hamartoma with seizures (1 in 225 000), and Rasmussen syndrome (1 in 450 000). Five of 28 rare epilepsies had no prior estimates, and of these, we provided a new estimate for developmental/epileptic encephalopathy with spike-and-wave activation in sleep and/or continuous spikes and waves during sleep (1 in 34 100). Data were limited for the remaining 12 rare epilepsies, which were all genetic epilepsies, including PCDH19, CDKL5, Alpers disease, SCN8A, KCNQ2, SCN2A, GLUT1 deficiency, Phelan-McDermid syndrome, myoclonic epilepsy with ragged-red fibers, dup15q syndrome, ring chromosome 14, and ring chromosome 20., Significance: We estimated the incidence of rare epilepsies using population-based electronic health record data and literature review. More research is needed to better estimate the incidence of genetic epilepsies with nonspecific clinical features. Electronic health records may be a valuable data source for studying rare epilepsies and other rare diseases, particularly as genetic testing becomes more widely adopted., (© 2024 International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2024
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4. Pediatric Palliative Epilepsy Surgery: A Report From the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Consortium (PERC) Surgery Database.
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Jeno M, Zimmerman MB, Shandley S, Wong-Kisiel L, Singh RK, McNamara N, Fedak Romanowski E, Grinspan ZM, Eschbach K, Alexander A, McGoldrick P, Wolf S, Nangia S, Bolton J, Olaya J, Shrey DW, Karia S, Karakas C, Tatachar P, Ostendorf AP, Gedela S, Javarayee P, Reddy S, Manuel CM, Gonzalez-Giraldo E, Sullivan J, Coryell J, Depositario-Cabacar DFT, Hauptman JS, Samanta D, Armstrong D, Perry MS, Marashly A, and Ciliberto M
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- Humans, Child, Child, Preschool, Male, Female, Infant, Adolescent, Neurosurgical Procedures, Registries, Infant, Newborn, Treatment Outcome, Epilepsy surgery, Palliative Care, Drug Resistant Epilepsy surgery, Databases, Factual
- Abstract
Background: Epilepsy surgery is an underutilized resource for children with drug-resistant epilepsy. Palliative and definitive surgical options can reduce seizure burden and improve quality of life. Palliative epilepsy surgery is often seen as a "last resort" compared to definitive surgical options. We compare patient characteristics between palliative and definitive epilepsy surgical patients and present palliative surgical outcomes from the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Consortium surgical database., Methods: The Pediatric Epilepsy Research Consortium Epilepsy Surgery database is a prospective registry of patients aged 0-18 years undergoing evaluation for epilepsy surgery at 20 pediatric epilepsy centers. We included all children with completed surgical therapy characterized as definitive or palliative. Demographics, epilepsy type, age of onset, age at referral, etiology of epilepsy, treatment history, time-to-referral/evaluation, number of failed anti-seizure medications (ASMs), imaging results, type of surgery, and postoperative outcome were acquired., Results: Six hundred forty patients undergoing epilepsy surgery were identified. Patients undergoing palliative procedures were younger at seizure onset (median: 2.1 vs 4 years, P= 0.0008), failed more ASM trials before referral for presurgical evaluation (P=<0.0001), and had longer duration of epilepsy before referral for surgery (P=<0.0001). During presurgical evaluation, patients undergoing palliative surgery had shorter median duration of video-EEG data collected (P=0.007) but number of cases where ictal data were acquired was similar between groups. The most commonly performed palliative procedure was corpus callosotmy (31%), followed by lobectomy (21%) and neuromodulation (82% responsive neurostimulation vs 18% deep brain stimulation). Palliative patients were further categorized into traditionally palliative procedures vs traditionally definitive procedures. The majority of palliative patients had 50% reduction or better in seizure burden. Seizure free outcomes were significantly higher among those with traditional definitive surgeries, 41% (95% confidence interval: 26% to 57%) compared with traditional palliative surgeries and 9% (95% confidence interval: 2% to 17%). Rate of seizure freedom was 46% at 24 months or greater of follow-up in the traditional definitive group., Conclusions: Patients receiving palliative epilepsy surgery trialed more ASMs, were referred later after becoming drug resistant, and had longer gaps between drug resistance and epilepsy surgery compared with patients undergoing definitive epilepsy surgery. The extent of surgical evaluation is impacted if surgery is thought to be palliative. A majority of palliative surgery patients achieved >50% seizure reduction at follow-up, both in groups that received traditionally palliative and traditionally definitive surgical procedures. Palliative surgical patients can achieve greater seizure control and should be referred to an epilepsy surgery center promptly after failing two appropriate anti-seizure medications., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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5. Implications of Large Language Models for Quality and Efficiency of Neurologic Care: Emerging Issues in Neurology.
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Moura L, Jones DT, Sheikh IS, Murphy S, Kalfin M, Kummer BR, Weathers AL, Grinspan ZM, Silsbee HM, Jones LK Jr.,, and Patel AD
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- Humans, Quality of Health Care, Neurology standards, Artificial Intelligence
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Large language models (LLMs) are advanced artificial intelligence (AI) systems that excel in recognizing and generating human-like language, possibly serving as valuable tools for neurology-related information tasks. Although LLMs have shown remarkable potential in various areas, their performance in the dynamic environment of daily clinical practice remains uncertain. This article outlines multiple limitations and challenges of using LLMs in clinical settings that need to be addressed, including limited clinical reasoning, variable reliability and accuracy, reproducibility bias, self-serving bias, sponsorship bias, and potential for exacerbating health care disparities. These challenges are further compounded by practical business considerations and infrastructure requirements, including associated costs. To overcome these hurdles and harness the potential of LLMs effectively, this article includes considerations for health care organizations, researchers, and neurologists contemplating the use of LLMs in clinical practice. It is essential for health care organizations to cultivate a culture that welcomes AI solutions and aligns them seamlessly with health care operations. Clear objectives and business plans should guide the selection of AI solutions, ensuring they meet organizational needs and budget considerations. Engaging both clinical and nonclinical stakeholders can help secure necessary resources, foster trust, and ensure the long-term sustainability of AI implementations. Testing, validation, training, and ongoing monitoring are pivotal for successful integration. For neurologists, safeguarding patient data privacy is paramount. Seeking guidance from institutional information technology resources for informed, compliant decisions, and remaining vigilant against biases in LLM outputs are essential practices in responsible and unbiased utilization of AI tools. In research, obtaining institutional review board approval is crucial when dealing with patient data, even if deidentified, to ensure ethical use. Compliance with established guidelines like SPIRIT-AI, MI-CLAIM, and CONSORT-AI is necessary to maintain consistency and mitigate biases in AI research. In summary, the integration of LLMs into clinical neurology offers immense promise while presenting formidable challenges. Awareness of these considerations is vital for harnessing the potential of AI in neurologic care effectively and enhancing patient care quality and safety. The article serves as a guide for health care organizations, researchers, and neurologists navigating this transformative landscape.
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- 2024
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6. Pediatric Mental Health Emergencies During 5 COVID-19 Waves in New York City.
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Levine DA, Oh PS, Nash KA, Simmons W, Grinspan ZM, Abramson EL, Platt SL, and Green C
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- Adolescent, Humans, Child, Female, Emergencies, New York City epidemiology, Pandemics, Emergency Service, Hospital, Mental Health, COVID-19 epidemiology
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Objectives: To describe the proportion of pediatric mental health emergency department (MH-ED) visits across 5 COVID-19 waves in New York City (NYC) and to examine the relationship between MH-ED visits, COVID-19 prevalence, and societal restrictions., Methods: We conducted a time-series analysis of MH-ED visits among patients ages 5 to 17 years using the INSIGHT Clinical Research Network, a database from 5 medical centers in NYC from January 1, 2016, to June 12, 2022. We estimated seasonally adjusted changes in MH-ED visit rates during the COVID-19 pandemic, compared with predicted prepandemic levels, specific to each COVID-19 wave and stratified by mental health diagnoses and sociodemographic characteristics. We estimated associations between MH-ED visit rates, COVID-19 prevalence, and societal restrictions measured by the Stringency Index., Results: Of 686 500 ED visits in the cohort, 27 168 (4.0%) were MH-ED visits. The proportion of MH-ED visits was higher during each COVID-19 wave compared with predicted prepandemic trends. Increased MH-ED visits were seen for eating disorders across all waves; anxiety disorders in all except wave 3; depressive disorders and suicidality/self-harm in wave 2; and substance use disorders in waves 2, 4, and 5. MH-ED visits were increased from expected among female, adolescent, Asian race, high Child Opportunity Index patients. There was no association between MH-ED visits and NYC COVID-19 prevalence or NY State Stringency Index., Conclusions: The proportion of pediatric MH-ED visits during the COVID-19 pandemic was higher during each wave compared with the predicted prepandemic period, with varied increases among diagnostic and sociodemographic subgroups. Enhanced pediatric mental health resources are essential to address these findings., (Copyright © 2023 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2023
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7. Creating rare epilepsy cohorts using keyword search in electronic health records.
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Barbour K, Tian N, Yozawitz EG, Wolf S, McGoldrick PE, Sands TT, Nelson A, Basma N, and Grinspan ZM
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- Humans, Electronic Health Records, Seizures, Epilepsy diagnosis, Epilepsy epidemiology, Lennox Gastaut Syndrome, Epilepsies, Myoclonic
- Abstract
Objective: Administrative codes to identify people with rare epilepsies in electronic health records are limited. The current study evaluated the use of keyword search as an alternative method for rare epilepsy cohort creation using electronic health records data., Methods: Data included clinical notes from encounters with International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes for seizures, epilepsy, and/or convulsions during 2010-2014, across six health care systems in New York City. We identified cases with rare epilepsies by searching clinical notes for keywords associated with 33 rare epilepsies. We validated cases via manual chart review. We compared the performance of keyword search to manual chart review using positive predictive value (PPV), sensitivity, and F-score. We selected an initial combination of keywords using the highest F-scores., Results: Data included clinical notes from 77 924 cases with ICD-9 codes for seizures, epilepsy, and/or convulsions. The all-keyword search method identified 6095 candidates, and manual chart review confirmed that 2068 (34%) had a rare epilepsy. The initial combination method identified 1862 cases with a rare epilepsy, and this method performed as follows: PPV median = .64 (interquartile range [IQR] = .50-.81, range = .20-1.00), sensitivity median = .93 (IQR = .76-1.00, range = .10-1.00), and F-score median = .71 (IQR = .63-.85, range = .18-1.00). Using this method, we identified four cohorts of rare epilepsies with over 100 individuals, including infantile spasms, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, Rett syndrome, and tuberous sclerosis complex. We identified over 50 individuals with two rare epilepsies that do not have specific ICD-10 codes for cohort creation (epilepsy with myoclonic atonic seizures, Sturge-Weber syndrome)., Significance: Keyword search is an effective method for cohort creation. These findings can improve identification and surveillance of individuals with rare epilepsies and promote their referral to specialty clinics, clinical research, and support groups., (© 2023 International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2023
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8. Corrigendum to "Reproductive Health Counseling in Adolescent Women With Epilepsy: A Single-Center Study" Pediatric Neurology 131C (2022)(49-53).
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Smith CC, Curcio AM, and Grinspan ZM
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- 2023
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9. Corrigendum to Patterns of Recording Epileptic Spasms in an Electronic Seizure Diary Compared to Video EEG and Historical Cohorts' Pediatric Neurology 122C (2021) (27-34).
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LaGrant B, Goldenholz DM, Braun M, Moss RE, and Grinspan ZM
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- 2023
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10. Natural history variations for neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis type 2: In support of newborn screening.
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Cabassa Miskimen A, Cohen LL, Yozawitz EG, and Grinspan ZM
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- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Neonatal Screening, Neuronal Ceroid-Lipofuscinoses diagnosis, Neuronal Ceroid-Lipofuscinoses genetics
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- 2023
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11. COVID-19 is Observed in Older Children During the Omicron Wave in New York City.
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Narayanan N, Langer S, Acker KP, Rosenblatt SD, Simmons W, Wu A, Han JY, Abramson EL, Grinspan ZM, and Levine DA
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- Humans, Child, SARS-CoV-2, New York City, Cross-Sectional Studies, Pandemics, Respiratory Sounds, COVID-19, Croup, Respiratory Tract Infections
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Background: The Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 has a predilection for the upper airways, causing symptoms such as sore throat, hoarse voice, and stridor., Objective: We describe a series of children with COVID-19-associated croup in an urban multicenter hospital system., Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study of children ≤18 years of age presenting to the emergency department during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data were extracted from an institutional data repository comprised of all patients who were tested for SARS-CoV-2. We included patients with a croup diagnosis by International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision code and a positive SARS-CoV-2 test within 3 days of presentation. We compared demographics, clinical characteristics, and outcomes for patients presenting during a pre-Omicron period (March 1, 2020-December 1, 2021) to the Omicron wave (December 2, 2021-February 15, 2022)., Results: We identified 67 children with croup, 10 (15%) pre-Omicron and 57 (85%) during the Omicron wave. The prevalence of croup among SARS-CoV-2-positive children increased by a factor of 5.8 (95% confidence interval 3.0-11.4) during the Omicron wave compared to prior. More patients were ≥6 years of age in the Omicron wave than prior (19% vs. 0%). The majority were not hospitalized (77%). More patients ≥6 years of age received epinephrine therapy for croup during the Omicron wave (73% vs. 35%). Most patients ≥6 years of age had no croup history (64%) and only 45% were vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2., Conclusion: Croup was prevalent during the Omicron wave, atypically affecting patients ≥6 years of age. COVID-19-associated croup should be added to the differential diagnosis of children with stridor, regardless of age. © 2022 Elsevier Inc., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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12. Multicenter Assessment of Sturge-Weber Syndrome: A Retrospective Study of Variations in Care and Use of Natural History Data.
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Arnesen RA, Barbour KK, Wu A, Yozawitz EG, Nelson A, Wolf SM, McGoldrick PE, Basma N, and Grinspan ZM
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- Humans, Female, Child, Male, Retrospective Studies, Seizures, Aspirin, Sturge-Weber Syndrome diagnosis, Epilepsy epidemiology, Epilepsy therapy, Epilepsy diagnosis, Glaucoma diagnosis
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Background: We summarize the history of individuals with Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) to inform clinical trial design and identify variations in care., Methods: We performed retrospective chart review of individuals with SWS from centers in New York City. We characterized data quality using a novel scoring system. For 13 clinical concepts, we evaluated if data were present and if they were of high quality., Results: We included 26 individuals with SWS (58% female; median age at initial visit 7 years; absolute range 1 month to 56 years]). Twenty-two had nevus flammeus, 13 glaucoma, four homonymous hemianopia, and 15 hemiparesis. Nineteen of 21 had at least one confirmed seizure with a known first seizure date, all before 24 months. Most (18 of 26, 69%) epilepsy was controlled. A plurality (10 of 23, 43%) had either normal cognitive function or mild cognitive delays. Aspirin use varied by site (P = 0.02)-at four sites, use was 0% (zero of three), 0% (zero of four), 80% (four of five), and 64% (nine of 14). Data were present for more than 75% of cases for 11 of 13 clinical concepts (missing: age of diagnosis, age of glaucoma onset). There were gaps in level of detail for motor impairments, glaucoma severity, seizure history, cognition, and medication history., Conclusions: Clinical charts have important gaps in the level of detail around core SWS clinical features, limiting value for some natural history studies. Any clinical trial in SWS designed to prevent epilepsy should begin in the first year of life. Variations in use of aspirin suggest de facto clinical equipoise and warrant a comparative effectiveness study., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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13. Indications for Hospitalization in Children with SARS-CoV-2 Infection during the Omicron Wave in New York City.
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Acker KP, Levine DA, Varghese M, Nash KA, RoyChoudhury A, Abramson EL, Grinspan ZM, Simmons W, Wu A, and Han JY
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The emergence of the Omicron variant was accompanied by an acute increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations in New York City. An increased incidence of COVID-19-associated croup in children during the Omicron wave has been recognized, suggesting that there may be other changes in clinical symptoms and severity. To better understand clinical outcomes and health care utilization in children infected with SARS-CoV-2 during the Omicron wave, we performed a cross-sectional study in pediatric patients aged ≤18 years who were tested for SARS-CoV-2 in pediatric emergency departments within a large medical system in New York City from 2 December 2021 to 23 January 2022. We described the clinical characteristics and outcomes of pediatric patients who presented to the pediatric emergency department and were hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 infection during the Omicron wave in New York City. There were 2515 children tested in the ED for SARS-CoV-2 of whom 794 (31.6%) tested positive. Fifty-eight children were hospitalized for a COVID-19-related indication, representing 7.3% of all COVID-19-positive children and 72% of hospitalized COVID-19-positive children. Most (64%) children hospitalized for a COVID-19-related indication were less than 5 years old. Indications for hospitalization included respiratory symptoms, clinical monitoring of patients with comorbid conditions, and exacerbations of underlying disease. Eleven (19%) hospitalized children were admitted to the ICU and six (10%) required mechanical ventilation. Children infected with COVID-19 during the Omicron wave, particularly those less than 5 years old, were at risk for hospitalization. A majority of hospitalizations were directly related to COVID-19 infection although clinical indications varied with less than a half being admitted for respiratory diseases including croup. Our findings underscore the need for an effective COVID-19 vaccine in those less than 5 years old, continued monitoring for changes in clinical outcomes and health care utilization in children as more SARS-CoV-2 variants emerge, and understanding that children are often admitted for non-respiratory diseases with COVID-19.
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- 2022
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14. Inequities in Therapy for Infantile Spasms: A Call to Action.
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Baumer FM, Mytinger JR, Neville K, Briscoe Abath C, Gutierrez CA, Numis AL, Harini C, He Z, Hussain SA, Berg AT, Chu CJ, Gaillard WD, Loddenkemper T, Pasupuleti A, Samanta D, Singh RK, Singhal NS, Wusthoff CJ, Wirrell EC, Yozawitz E, Knupp KG, Shellhaas RA, and Grinspan ZM
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- Black People, Child, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Prospective Studies, Vigabatrin therapeutic use, Spasms, Infantile drug therapy
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Objective: The aim of this study was to determine whether selection of treatment for children with infantile spasms (IS) varies by race/ethnicity., Methods: The prospective US National Infantile Spasms Consortium database includes children with IS treated from 2012 to 2018. We examined the relationship between race/ethnicity and receipt of standard IS therapy (prednisolone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, vigabatrin), adjusting for demographic and clinical variables using logistic regression. Our primary outcome was treatment course, which considered therapy prescribed for the first and, when needed, the second IS treatment together., Results: Of 555 children, 324 (58%) were non-Hispanic white, 55 (10%) non-Hispanic Black, 24 (4%) non-Hispanic Asian, 80 (14%) Hispanic, and 72 (13%) other/unknown. Most (398, 72%) received a standard treatment course. Insurance type, geographic location, history of prematurity, prior seizures, developmental delay or regression, abnormal head circumference, hypsarrhythmia, and IS etiologies were associated with standard therapy. In adjusted models, non-Hispanic Black children had lower odds of receiving a standard treatment course compared with non-Hispanic white children (odds ratio [OR], 0.42; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.20-0.89; p = 0.02). Adjusted models also showed that children with public (vs. private) insurance had lower odds of receiving standard therapy for treatment 1 (OR, 0.42; CI, 0.21-0.84; p = 0.01)., Interpretation: Non-Hispanic Black children were more often treated with non-standard IS therapies than non-Hispanic white children. Likewise, children with public (vs. private) insurance were less likely to receive standard therapies. Investigating drivers of inequities, and understanding the impact of racism on treatment decisions, are critical next steps to improve care for patients with IS. ANN NEUROL 2022;92:32-44., (© 2022 American Neurological Association.)
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- 2022
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15. Reproductive Health Counseling in Adolescent Women With Epilepsy: A Single-Center Study.
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Smith CC, Curcio AM, and Grinspan ZM
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- Adolescent, Child, Contraception, Counseling, Female, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Epilepsy therapy, Reproductive Health
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Background: Counseling adolescent women with epilepsy (WWE) about reproductive health (contraception, sexual activity, and menstruation) is important given the teratogenicity of many antiseizure medications and high rates of contraception failure. Only a third of adolescent WWE report discussing contraception with their epileptologists, demonstrating a significant gap in counseling., Methods: We assessed factors associated with reproductive health counseling by pediatric neurologists via a retrospective chart review of adolescent (aged 12-18 years) WWE seen at a pediatric neurology clinic from 2018 to 2020., Results: We analyzed 219 visits among 89 unique WWE. There were 23 documented discussions on contraception (11% of visits), 8 on sexual activity (4%), and 127 on menstruation (58%). When contraception was discussed, sexual activity and menstruation were more frequently discussed. Female providers were more likely to document a discussion of menstruation (OR = 3.2, 95% CI = [1.6, 6.4]). WWE who were older at the time of visit or who had their first seizure at an older age were more likely to have documented discussions of contraception and sexual activity. Neither details of treatment regimen nor epilepsy type was associated with documentation of counseling., Conclusions: A minority of adolescent WWE have documented reproductive health discussions, demonstrating a need for quality improvement projects to address this gap in care., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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16. Leveraging electronic patient diaries in SUDEP risk evaluation.
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Berl MM, Moss R, Bumbut A, Donner EJ, Gaillard WD, Goodkin HP, Grinspan ZM, Kroner BL, Mbwana J, Patel AD, and Lapham G
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- Death, Sudden epidemiology, Death, Sudden etiology, Electronics, Humans, Seizures complications, Epilepsy complications, Epilepsy epidemiology, Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy epidemiology
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Objective: Our aim was to describe the risk factors known to be related to sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) that can be extracted from patients that utilizes an online seizure diary tool (SeizureTracker™)., Method: We conducted a descriptive analysis of SeizureTracker™ users across factors relevant to SUDEP risk. We also compared our app-using cohort to published SUDEP case-control studies., Results: We report across seven risk factors from 30,813 users of SeizureTracker™ who had a median length of time using the app of 5.69 years (range from 1 month to 15 years). We found that they are at greater risk for SUDEP than groups from published studies (p < .00001) based on the risk factor of generalized tonic-clonic seizures., Significance: We demonstrated that the population using the SeizureTracker™ tool can be a valuable population for expanding investigation of SUDEP risk factors and is a first step towards establishing a large sample with a method to ascertain data prospectively that might be critical to developing a SUDEP risk algorithm., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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17. Pediatric Epilepsy Learning Healthcare System Quality of Life (PELHS-QOL-2): A novel health-related quality of life prompt for children with epilepsy.
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Shah PD, Yun M, Wu A, Arnesen RA, Storey M, Sokoloff M, Shellhaas RA, Turnage C, Axeen EJ, Goodkin HP, Patel AD, Wentzel E, Modi AC, and Grinspan ZM
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires, Epilepsy drug therapy, Learning Health System
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Objective: Pediatric epilepsy is often associated with diminished health-related quality of life (HRQOL). Our aim was to establish the validity of the Pediatric Epilepsy Learning Healthcare System Quality of Life (PELHS-QOL-2) questions, a novel two-item HRQOL prompt for children with epilepsy, primarily for use in clinical care., Methods: We performed a multicenter cross-sectional study to validate the PELHS-QOL-2. Construct validity was established through bivariate comparisons with four comparator measures and known drivers of quality of life in children with epilepsy, as well as by creating an a priori multivariable model to predict the Quality of Life in Childhood Epilepsy Questionnaire (QOLCE-55). Validity generalization was established through bivariate comparisons with demographic and clinical information. Content validity and clinical utility were established by assessing how well the PELHS-QOL-2 met eight design criteria for an HRQOL prompt established by a multistakeholder group of experts., Results: The final participant sample included 154 English-speaking caregivers of children with epilepsy (mean age = 9.7 years, range = .5-18, 49% female, 70% White). The PELHS-QOL-2 correlated with the four comparator instruments (ρ = .44-.56), was significantly associated with several known drivers of quality of life in children with epilepsy (p < .05), and predicted QOLCE-55 scores in the multivariate model (adjusted R
2 = .54). The PELHS-QOL-2 item was not associated with the age, sex, and ethnicity of the children nor with the setting and location of data collection, although PELHS-QOL-Medications was significantly associated with race (worse for White race). Following both quantitative and qualitative analysis, the PELHS-QOL-2 met seven of eight design criteria., Significance: The PELHS-QOL-2 is a valid HRQOL prompt and is well suited for use in clinical care as a mechanism to routinely initiate conversations with caregivers about quality of life in children with epilepsy. The association of PELHS-QOL-Medications with race merits further study., (© 2021 International League Against Epilepsy.)- Published
- 2022
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18. Automated Identification of Surgical Candidates and Estimation of Postoperative Seizure Freedom in Children - A Focused Review.
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Samanta D, Beal JC, and Grinspan ZM
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- Adult, Child, Electroencephalography, Freedom, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Seizures diagnosis, Seizures surgery, Treatment Outcome, Drug Resistant Epilepsy, Epilepsy
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Surgery is an effective but underused treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy in children. Algorithms to identify surgical candidates and estimate the likelihood of postoperative clinical improvement may be valuable to improve access to epilepsy surgery. We provide a focused review of these approaches. For adults with epilepsy, tools to identify surgical candidates and predict seizure and cognitive outcomes (Ie, Cases for Epilepsy (toolsforepilepsy.com) and Epilepsy Surgery Grading Scale) have been validated and are in use. Analogous tools for children need development. A promising approach is to apply statistical learning tools to clinical datasets, such as electroencephalogram tracings, imaging studies, and the text of clinician notes. Demonstration projects suggest these techniques have the potential to be highly accurate, and await further validation and clinical application., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Dr. Beal has no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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19. Medication selection, health services outcomes, and cost trajectories for Medicaid beneficiaries with infantile spasms.
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Min JY, Knupp KG, Patel AD, Shellhaas RA, Zhang M, and Grinspan ZM
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- Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Child, Health Services, Humans, Infant, Medicaid, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Vigabatrin therapeutic use, Spasms, Infantile drug therapy
- Abstract
Objective: There are three recommended first-line treatments for infantile spasms, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), oral corticosteroids, and vigabatrin, though non-standard treatments such as topiramate are sometimes selected. Is it uncertain how treatment selection influences health services outcomes., Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of Medicaid beneficiaries newly diagnosed with infantile spasms from 2009-2010. We included infants with a new diagnosis of infantile spasms between age 2-9 months who filled ACTH (reference), prednisolone, vigabatrin, or topiramate prescriptions. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression compared time to first emergency department (ED) visit or hospitalization across treatment groups during 2 years of follow-up. Monthly costs for each treatment were examined in 6-month intervals and compared in a multivariable generalized linear model., Results: Among 256 children with infantile spasms, 116 received ACTH, 62 prednisolone, 15 vigabatrin, and 63 topiramate. The rate of ED visit or hospitalization per person-year did not differ significantly for prednisolone (0.9 [95 % CI 0.7-1.2]; adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.84, 95 % CI 0.57-1.24), vigabatrin (0.8 [95 % CI 0.4-1.5]; aHR 0.91, 95% CI 0.45-1.84), or topiramate (1.7 [95 % CI 1.3-2.3]; aHR 1.15, 95 % CI 0.80-1.65), when compared to ACTH (1.1 [95 % CI 0.9-1.3]). The median payment for ACTH was $96,406 (interquartile range 70,742-138,476) during the first 6 months. The adjusted mean total payment in the first 6 months was 73% lower for prednisolone (95% CI -82, -61), 69% lower for vigabatrin (95% CI -84, -40), and 73% lower for topiramate (95% CI -82, -59). However, in subsequent 6-month intervals, costs associated with ACTH were not significantly different compared to other treatments., Significance: Compared to other treatments for infantile spasms, use of ACTH was associated with greater cost in the first 6 months of treatment, but not with reduced ED visits or hospitalizations. The cost effectiveness of ACTH depends on its relative clinical efficacy, and merits additional research., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2021
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20. Comparative Effectiveness of Initial Treatment for Infantile Spasms in a Contemporary US Cohort.
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Grinspan ZM, Knupp KG, Patel AD, Yozawitz EG, Wusthoff CJ, Wirrell EC, Valencia I, Singhal NS, Nordli DR, Mytinger JR, Mitchell WG, Keator CG, Loddenkemper T, Hussain SA, Harini C, Gaillard WD, Fernandez IS, Coryell J, Chu CJ, Berg AT, and Shellhaas RA
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of initial treatment for infantile spasms., Methods: The National Infantile Spasms Consortium prospectively followed up children with new-onset infantile spasms that began at age 2 to 24 months at 23 US centers (2012-2018). Freedom from treatment failure at 60 days required no second treatment for infantile spasms and no clinical spasms after 30 days of treatment initiation. We managed treatment selection bias with propensity score weighting and within-center correlation with generalized estimating equations., Results: Freedom from treatment failure rates were as follows: adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) 88 of 190 (46%), oral steroids 42 of 95 (44%), vigabatrin 32 of 87 (37%), and nonstandard therapy 4 of 51 (8%). Changing from oral steroids to ACTH was not estimated to affect response (observed 44% estimated to change to 44% [95% confidence interval 34%-54%]). Changing from nonstandard therapy to ACTH would improve response from 8% to 39% (17%-67%), and changing to oral steroids would improve response from 8% to 38% (15%-68%). There were large but not statistically significant estimated effects of changing from vigabatrin to ACTH (29% to 42% [15%-75%]), from vigabatrin to oral steroids (29% to 42% [28%-57%]), and from nonstandard therapy to vigabatrin (8% to 20% [6%-50%]). Among children treated with vigabatrin, those with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) responded more often than others (62% vs 29%; p < 0.05)., Discussion: Compared to nonstandard therapy, ACTH and oral steroids are superior for initial treatment of infantile spasms. The estimated effectiveness of vigabatrin is between that of ACTH/oral steroids and nonstandard therapy, although the sample was underpowered for statistical confidence. When used, vigabatrin worked best for TSC., Classification of Evidence: This study provides Class III evidence that for children with new-onset infantile spasms, ACTH or oral steroids were superior to nonstandard therapies., (© 2021 American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2021
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21. Patterns of Recording Epileptic Spasms in an Electronic Seizure Diary Compared With Video-EEG and Historical Cohorts.
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LaGrant B, Goldenholz DM, Braun M, Moss RE, and Grinspan ZM
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- Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Medical Records, Video Recording, Caregivers, Electroencephalography methods, Mobile Applications, Spasms, Infantile diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Use of electronic seizure diaries (e-diaries) by caregivers of children with epileptic spasms is not well understood. We describe the demographic and seizure-related information of children with epileptic spasms captured in a widely used e-diary and explore the potential biases in how caregivers report these data., Methods: We analyzed children with epileptic spasms in an e-diary, Seizure Tracker, from 2007 to 2018. We described variables including sex, time of seizure, percentage of spasms occurring as individual spasms (versus in clusters), cluster duration, and number of spasms per cluster. We compared seizure characteristics in the e-diary cohort with published cohorts to identify biases in caregiver-reported epileptic spasms. We also reviewed seizure patterns in a small cohort of children with epileptic spasms monitored on overnight video-electroencephalography (vEEG)., Results: There were 314 children in the e-diary cohort and nine children in the vEEG cohort. The e-diary cohort was more likely than expected to report counts divisible by five. The e-diary cohort had a lower proportion of nighttime spasms than expected based on data from published cohorts. The e-diary cohort had a significantly lower percentage of spasms as individual spasms, a greater number of spasms per cluster, and a greater cluster duration relative to the vEEG cohort., Conclusions: Caregivers using e-diaries for epileptic spasms may miss individual spams, be more likely to report long clusters, round counts to the nearest five, and underreport nighttime spasms. Clinicians should be aware of these reporting biases when using e-diary data to guide care for children with epileptic spasms., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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22. Health and Financial Burdens Associated With Venous Thrombosis in Hospitalized Children With Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
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Chien KA, Cooley V, Prishtina F, Grinspan ZM, Gerber LM, and Kucine N
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- Anticoagulants, Child, Child, Hospitalized, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Risk Factors, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases complications, Venous Thromboembolism epidemiology, Venous Thromboembolism etiology, Venous Thromboembolism prevention & control, Venous Thrombosis epidemiology, Venous Thrombosis etiology, Venous Thrombosis prevention & control
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Abstract: Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a known complication in children with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Despite awareness of the increased thrombosis risk in this population, prophylaxis is not standardly used and there is limited published guidance for thrombosis prevention. To better appreciate the impact of thrombosis in this population, we compared children with IBD who did or did not have a VTE, using the Pediatric Health Information System inpatient database from 2009 to 2017. In hospitalized children with IBD, VTE was associated with longer median hospital stays (11 vs 5 days), need for intensive care unit admission (30.2% vs 4.8%), higher median adjusted costs ($32.8k vs $12.3k) and hospital charges ($96.6k vs $36k), and in-hospital death (1.5% vs 0.2%) (P < 0.001 in all comparisons). These findings highlight the need to determine and implement appropriate strategies to reduce VTE rates in children with IBD, given its association with high morbidity, mortality, and cost., Competing Interests: There are no relevant conflicts of interest or funding for this project for any author. For completeness, Z.M.G. has done consulting work for Alpha Insights and Bio-Pharm Solutions (South Korea), and receives research funding from the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Foundation, the Morris and Alma Schapiro Fund, the Orphan Disease Center, Clara Inspired, and Weill Cornell Medicine. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 by European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition and North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition.)
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- 2021
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23. Predictors of SUDEP counseling and implications for designing interventions.
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Barbour K, Yozawitz EG, McGoldrick PE, Wolf S, Nelson A, and Grinspan ZM
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- Adult, Child, Counseling, Death, Sudden epidemiology, Death, Sudden prevention & control, Humans, Risk Factors, Seizures, Epilepsy complications, Epilepsy therapy, Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy
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Objective: We aimed to describe how often and why clinicians counsel people with epilepsy about sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). Understanding counseling gaps can help design interventions., Methods: We searched clinical notes of 77,924 patients from 2010 to 2014 from six hospitals to find examples of SUDEP counseling and seizure safety counseling. Visits were coded for patient, clinician, and visit factors, and documented reasons for counseling. We evaluated factors associated with SUDEP vs. seizure safety counseling, and reasons for counseling using bivariate and multivariable statistics. Reasons for counseling included: poor medication adherence, lifestyle factors (e.g., poor sleep, drinking alcohol), patient/family reluctance to make recommended medication adjustment, epilepsy surgery considerations, and patient education only., Results: Analysis was restricted to two of six hospitals where 91% of counseling occurred. Documentation of SUDEP counseling was rare (332 of 33,821 patients, 1.0%), almost exclusively by epileptologists (98.5% of counseling), and stable over time, X
2 (4, n = 996) = 3.81, p = 0.43. Adult neurologists were more likely to document SUDEP counseling than pediatric (OR = 1.65, 95% CI = 1.12-2.44). Most SUDEP counseling was documented with a goal of seizure reduction (214 of 332, 64.5%), though some was for patient education only (118 of 332, 35.5%). By the time SUDEP counseling was documented, the majority of patients had refractory epilepsy (187 of 332, 56.3%) and/or a potentially modifiable risk factor (214 of 332, 64.5%). Neurologists with more years of clinical experience (OR = 2.18, 95% CI = 1.12-4.25) and more senior academic titles (OR = 2.25, 95% CI = 1.27-3.99) were more likely to document SUDEP counseling for patient education only. People with ≥2 anti-seizure medications (ASM) were more likely to receive counseling for patient education (OR = 2.72, 95% CI = 1.49-4.97)., Conclusions: Documentation of SUDEP is rare, and varies by clinician, hospital, and patient factors. Efforts to increase SUDEP counseling should focus on junior clinicians, and emphasize starting the conversation soon after onset of epilepsy., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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24. Evaluation of a Care Management Program for Pediatric Epilepsy Patients.
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Min JY, Patel AD, Glynn P, Otgonsuren M, Harridas B, and Grinspan ZM
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Pediatrics methods, Prospective Studies, Epilepsy therapy, Program Evaluation methods
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of a pediatric epilepsy care management intervention on emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and seizure freedom., Methods: We conducted a prospective observational study at a single academic medical center. Children with epilepsy with high risk of frequent emergency department use were enrolled in the intervention from January through May 2015, which included a baseline visit and follow-up support from a care management team. Controls selected from the same institution received standard of care. Baseline and follow-up information were collected from electronic health records and surveys (Family Impact Scale, Pediatric Epilepsy Medication Self-Management Questionnaire). Propensity score-weighted logistic regression compared emergency department visits, unplanned hospitalizations, and 3-month seizure freedom after 1 year in the intervention vs control groups., Results: A total of 56 children were enrolled in the intervention and 359 received standard of care. The intervention group was younger and had greater use of health services at baseline. When comparing the intervention to standard of care after 1 year, we found no significant difference in the risk of any emergency department visit (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2.2, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.6-8.5) or seizure freedom (adjusted OR 2.5, 95% CI 0.3-21.5). However, the risk of unplanned hospital admissions remained higher in the intervention group (adjusted OR 23.1, 95% CI 5.1-104)., Conclusion: We did not find that children with epilepsy who received a care management intervention had less use of health services or better clinical outcomes after a year compared with controls. The study is limited by small sample size and nonrandomized study design.
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- 2021
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25. The Pediatric Neurology 2020 Research Workforce Survey: Optimism in a Time of Challenge.
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Bonkowsky JL, Felling RJ, Grinspan ZM, Guerriero RM, Kosofsky BE, Lyons-Warren AM, and deVeber GA
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- COVID-19, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Optimism, Societies, Medical statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Workforce, Biomedical Research statistics & numerical data, Neurologists statistics & numerical data, Pediatricians statistics & numerical data, Research Personnel statistics & numerical data
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Background: The past decades have seen a transformational shift in the understanding and treatment for neurological diseases affecting infants and children. These advances have been driven in part by the pediatric neurology physician-scientist workforce and its efforts. However, pediatric neurology research faces substantial challenges from internal and external forces including work-life balance demands, COVID-19 pandemic effects, and research funding. Understanding the impact of these challenges on the perceptions, planning, and careers of pediatric neurology physician-scientists is needed to guide the research mission., Methods: Our objective was to survey the research challenges, goals, and priorities of pediatric neurologists. In 2020 we conducted a cross-sectional, 28-question survey emailed to 1,775 members of the Child Neurology Society., Results: One hundred fifty-one individuals responded to the survey. Most respondents were grant investigators (52%) and conducted clinical research (69%). Research areas included epilepsy (23%), neurodevelopmental and autism (16%), neurocritical care and stroke (11%), neurogenetics and neurometabolics (9%), neonatal neurology (8%), and others. The most common funding source was the National Institutes of Health (37%). Shared major research concerns were funding, utilization of remote technology, overcoming disparities, natural history and multicenter studies, global neurology, and diversification of the research portfolio. Commitment to continuing and increasing research efforts was evident., Conclusions: Our survey demonstrates obstacles for physician-scientist researchers in pediatric neurology, but it also shows optimism about continued opportunity. Creative approaches to address challenges will benefit the research mission, maximize the current and future pool of researchers, and help improve the lives of children with neurological disorders., (Crown Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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26. Automated identification and quality measurement for pediatric convulsive status epilepticus.
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Hess-Homeier DL, Parikh K, Basma N, Vella AE, and Grinspan ZM
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- Automation, Benzodiazepines therapeutic use, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Data Collection, Emergency Service, Hospital, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Drug Resistant Epilepsy drug therapy, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Status Epilepticus drug therapy, Time-to-Treatment statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: Treatment delays for refractory convulsive status epilepticus (RCSE) are associated with worse outcomes. In the United States, treatment for pediatric RCSE is slower than guidelines recommend. To address this gap, the American Academy of Neurology and Child Neurology Society (AAN/CNS) developed a quality measure: the percentage of RCSE patients that receive third-line treatment within 60 minutes. We aimed to develop computable phenotypes for convulsive status epilepticus (CSE) and RCSE to automate calculation of the quality measure., Methods: From an observational cohort of children presenting to the emergency department for seizures or epilepsy, we identified presentations of RCSE and its precursors: CSE and benzodiazepine-resistant status epilepticus (BRSE). These served as a gold standard for computable phenotype development. Using multivariate analyses, we constructed and evaluated statistical models for case identification. We then evaluated adherence to the AAN/CNS RCSE quality measure., Results: From 664 charts, we identified 56 patients with CSE, 36 with BRSE, and 18 with RCSE. Four predictors were used: International Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes, and receiving first-, second-, or third-line agents shortly after presentation to the emergency department (ED). Combinations of these predictors identified CSE with 84% sensitivity and 81% positive predictive value (PPV), BRSE with 67% sensitivity and 89% PPV, and RCSE with 94% sensitivity and 85% PPV. Median (interquartile range [IQR]) time to treatment for first-line agent was 13 (5-27) minutes for CSE, second-line for BRSE was 24 (9.5-43.5) minutes, and third-line for RCSE was 52 (27-87) minutes. Sixty percent of RCSE patients received a third-line agent within 60 minutes of ED arrival., Significance: RCSE and its precursors can be identified automatically with high fidelity allowing automated calculation of time to treatment and the RCSE quality measure. This has the potential to facilitate quality improvement work and improve care for RCSE., (© 2020 International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2021
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27. Design and implementation of electronic health record common data elements for pediatric epilepsy: Foundations for a learning health care system.
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Grinspan ZM, Patel AD, Shellhaas RA, Berg AT, Axeen ET, Bolton J, Clarke DF, Coryell J, Gaillard WD, Goodkin HP, Koh S, Kukla A, Mbwana JS, Morgan LA, Singhal NS, Storey MM, Yozawitz EG, Abend NS, Fitzgerald MP, Fridinger SE, Helbig I, Massey SL, Prelack MS, and Buchhalter J
- Subjects
- Comparative Effectiveness Research, Epidemiological Monitoring, Health Services Research, Humans, Implementation Science, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Quality Improvement, Common Data Elements, Electronic Health Records, Epilepsy diagnosis, Epilepsy physiopathology, Epilepsy therapy, Neurology, Pediatrics
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Objective: Common data elements (CDEs) are standardized questions and answer choices that allow aggregation, analysis, and comparison of observations from multiple sources. Clinical CDEs are foundational for learning health care systems, a data-driven approach to health care focused on continuous improvement of outcomes. We aimed to create clinical CDEs for pediatric epilepsy., Methods: A multiple stakeholder group (clinicians, researchers, parents, caregivers, advocates, and electronic health record [EHR] vendors) developed clinical CDEs for routine care of children with epilepsy. Initial drafts drew from clinical epilepsy note templates, CDEs created for clinical research, items in existing registries, consensus documents and guidelines, quality metrics, and outcomes needed for demonstration projects. The CDEs were refined through discussion and field testing. We describe the development process, rationale for CDE selection, findings from piloting, and the CDEs themselves. We also describe early implementation, including experience with EHR systems and compatibility with the International League Against Epilepsy classification of seizure types., Results: Common data elements were drafted in August 2017 and finalized in January 2020. Prioritized outcomes included seizure control, seizure freedom, American Academy of Neurology quality measures, presence of common comorbidities, and quality of life. The CDEs were piloted at 224 visits at 10 centers. The final CDEs included 36 questions in nine sections (number of questions): diagnosis (1), seizure frequency (9), quality of life (2), epilepsy history (6), etiology (8), comorbidities (2), treatment (2), process measures (5), and longitudinal history notes (1). Seizures are categorized as generalized tonic-clonic (regardless of onset), motor, nonmotor, and epileptic spasms. Focality is collected as epilepsy type rather than seizure type. Seizure frequency is measured in nine levels (all used during piloting). The CDEs were implemented in three vendor systems. Early clinical adoption included 1294 encounters at one center., Significance: We created, piloted, refined, finalized, and implemented a novel set of clinical CDEs for pediatric epilepsy., (© 2020 International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2021
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28. Our health-care system is failing young people with epilepsy.
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Hargreaves D, Hanna J, Grinspan ZM, Dunkley C, Saxena S, and Cross H
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- 2021
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29. Early Use of Antiseizure Medication in Mechanically Ventilated Traumatic Brain Injury Cases: A Retrospective Pediatric Health Information System Database Study.
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Haque KD, Grinspan ZM, Mauer E, and Nellis ME
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- Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Levetiracetam therapeutic use, Respiration, Artificial, Retrospective Studies, Brain Injuries, Traumatic complications, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnosis, Brain Injuries, Traumatic drug therapy, Health Information Systems
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Objectives: Traumatic brain injury is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in children. Post-traumatic seizures occur in 25% of children with severe traumatic brain injury and may worsen outcomes. Our objective was to use a retrospective cohort study to examine the association between the early seizure occurrence and the choice of early antiseizure medication in children with traumatic brain injury., Design: Retrospective cohort study using the Pediatric Health Information Systems database, 2010-2017., Setting: Fifty-one U.S. children's hospitals., Patients: Children (< 18 yr old at admission) with diagnostic codes for traumatic brain injury who were mechanically ventilated at the time of admission and with hospital length of stay greater than 24 hours., Interventions: None., Measurements and Main Results: A total of 3,479 children were identified via coding and including in the analysis. Patients receiving antiseizure medication starting day 0 with levetiracetam were compared with those receiving phenytoin. The outcome was seizure occurrence, identified using validated International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification and International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, Clinical Modification diagnosis codes. The median (interquartile range) age of patients was 4 (1-11) years, and the most common mechanism of injury was motor vehicle accident, occurring in 960 of patients (27%). A total of 2,342 patients (67%) received levetiracetam on day 0 and 1,137 patients (33%) received phenytoin on day 0. Totally 875 patients (37%) receiving levetiracetam on day 0 developed seizures, compared with 471 patients (41%) receiving phenytoin on day 0 (p = 0.02). Upon multivariable analysis adjusting for age, injury by child abuse, subdural hemorrhage, ethnicity, and admission year, children receiving phenytoin on day 0 were 1.26 (95% CI, 1.07-1.48) times more likely to be associated with post-traumatic seizure occurrence, compared with children receiving levetiracetam on day 0 (p = 0.01)., Conclusions: Early administration of levetiracetam was associated with less-frequent seizure occurrence than early administration of phenytoin in mechanically ventilated children with traumatic brain injury. Additional studies are necessary to determine if the association is causal or due to unmeasured confounders and/or selection bias., Competing Interests: Dr. Grinspan receives research funding from the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Foundation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Epilepsy Foundation, the Schapiro family foundation, the BAND foundation, and from Weill Cornell Medicine. The remaining authors have disclosed that they do not have any potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.)
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- 2021
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30. Risk for infantile spasms after acute symptomatic neonatal seizures.
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Glass HC, Grinspan ZM, Li Y, McNamara NA, Chang T, Chu CJ, Massey SL, Abend NS, Lemmon ME, Thomas C, McCulloch CE, and Shellhaas RA
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- Clinical Decision Rules, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Newborn, Diseases epidemiology, Logistic Models, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neuroimaging, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Infant, Newborn, Diseases pathology, Seizures complications, Spasms, Infantile etiology
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Objective: Infantile spasms (IS) is a severe epilepsy in early childhood. Early treatment of IS provides the best chance of seizure remission and favorable developmental outcome. We aimed to develop a prediction rule to accurately predict which neonates with acute symptomatic seizures will develop IS., Methods: We used data from the Neonatal Seizure Registry, a prospective, multicenter cohort of infants with acute symptomatic neonatal seizures born from July 2015 to March 2018. Neonates with acute symptomatic seizures who received clinical electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and were younger than 2 years of age at the time of enrollment were included. We evaluated the association of neonatal EEG, MRI, and clinical factors with subsequent IS using bivariate analysis and best subsets logistic regression. We selected a final model through a consensus process that balanced statistical significance with clinical relevance., Results: IS developed in 12 of 204 infants (6%). Multiple potential predictors were associated with IS, including Apgar scores, EEG features, seizure characteristics, MRI abnormalities, and clinical status at hospital discharge. The final model included three risk factors: (a) severely abnormal EEG or ≥3 days with seizures recorded on EEG, (b) deep gray or brainstem injury on MRI, and (c) abnormal tone on discharge exam. The stratified risk of IS was the following: no factors 0% (0/82, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0%-4%), one or two factors 4% (4/108, 95% CI 1%-9%), and all three factors 57% (8/14, 95% CI 29%-83%)., Significance: IS risk after acute symptomatic neonatal seizures can be stratified using commonly available clinical data. No child without risk factors, vs >50% of those with all three factors, developed IS. This risk prediction rule may be valuable for clinical counseling as well as for selecting participants for clinical trials to prevent post-neonatal epilepsy. This tailored approach may lead to earlier diagnosis and treatment and improve outcomes for a devastating early life epilepsy., (© 2020 International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2020
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31. Care Delivery for Children With Epilepsy During the COVID-19 Pandemic: An International Survey of Clinicians.
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Wirrell EC, Grinspan ZM, Knupp KG, Jiang Y, Hammeed B, Mytinger JR, Patel AD, Nabbout R, Specchio N, Cross JH, and Shellhaas RA
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- COVID-19, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Electroencephalography statistics & numerical data, Global Health, Health Care Surveys statistics & numerical data, Humans, Neurologists, Neurology methods, Pediatricians, Pediatrics methods, SARS-CoV-2, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections prevention & control, Delivery of Health Care methods, Epilepsy therapy, Health Care Surveys methods, Internationality, Pandemics prevention & control, Pneumonia, Viral prevention & control, Telemedicine methods
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on global access to care and practice patterns for children with epilepsy., Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional, online survey of pediatric neurologists across the world affiliated with the International Child Neurology Association, the Chinese Child Neurology Society, the Child Neurology Society, and the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Consortium. Results were analyzed in relation to regional burden of COVID-19 disease., Results: From April 10 to 24, 2020, a sample of 212 respondents from 49 countries indicated that the COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically changed many aspects of pediatric epilepsy care, with 91.5% reporting changes to outpatient care, 90.6% with reduced access to electroencephalography (EEG), 37.4% with altered management of infantile spasms, 92.3% with restrictions in ketogenic diet initiation, 93.4% with closed or severely limited epilepsy monitoring units, and 91.3% with canceled or limited epilepsy surgery. Telehealth use had increased, with 24.7% seeing patients exclusively via telehealth. Changes in practice were related both to COVID-19 burden and location., Conclusions: In response to COVID-19, pediatric epilepsy programs have implemented crisis standards of care that include increased telemedicine, decreased EEG use, changes in treatments of infantile spasms, and cessation of epilepsy surgery. The long-term impact of these abrupt changes merit careful study.
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- 2020
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32. An accelerated shift in the use of remote systems in epilepsy due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Kuchenbuch M, D'Onofrio G, Wirrell E, Jiang Y, Dupont S, Grinspan ZM, Auvin S, Wilmshurst JM, Arzimanoglou A, Cross JH, Specchio N, and Nabbout R
- Subjects
- Adult, Africa, Aged, Asia, Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, China, Computer Security, Confidentiality, Cross-Sectional Studies, Europe, Female, France, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Neurology, North America, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Remote Consultation trends, SARS-CoV-2, South America, Surveys and Questionnaires, Attitude of Health Personnel, Coronavirus Infections, Education, Distance trends, Epilepsy therapy, Neurologists, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral, Telemedicine trends
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the study was to describe epileptologists' opinion on the increased use of remote systems implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic across clinics, education, and scientific meetings activities., Methods: Between April and May 2020, we conducted a cross-sectional, electronic survey on remote systems use before and during the COVID-19 pandemic through the European reference center for rare and complex epilepsies (EpiCARE) network, the International and the French Leagues Against Epilepsy, and the International and the French Child Neurology Associations. After descriptive statistical analysis, we compared the results of France, China, and Italy., Results: One hundred and seventy-two respondents from 35 countries completed the survey. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, 63.4% had experienced remote systems for clinical care. During the pandemic, the use of remote clinics, either institutional or personal, significantly increased (p < 10
-4 ). Eighty-three percent used remote systems with video, either institutional (75%) or personal (25%). During the pandemic, 84.6% of respondents involved in academic activities transformed their courses to online teaching. From February to July 2020, few scientific meetings relevant to epileptologists and routinely attended was adapted to virtual meeting (median: 1 [25th-75th percentile: 0-2]). Responders were quite satisfied with remote systems in all three activity domains. Interestingly, before the COVID-19 pandemic, remote systems were significantly more frequently used in China for clinical activity compared with France or Italy. This difference became less marked during the pandemic., Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically altered how academic epileptologists carry out their core missions of clinical care, medical education, and scientific discovery and dissemination. Close attention to the impact of these changes is merited., Competing Interests: Disclosure of conflicts of interest M. Kuchenbuch, G D'Onofrio, Y. Jiang, ZM Grinspan, J Wilmshurst and R Nabbout have any conflict of interest to disclose. S Dupont has received honoria from EISAI, UCB, GW, Novartis, Advicenne and Shire. E Wirrell has acted as an investigator for GW Pharma and Zogenix and has received consulting fees from Biocodex and Biomarin. S Auvin has served as consultant or received honoraria for lectures from Arvelle therapeutics, Biocodex, Eisai, GW Pharma, Novartis, Nutricia, UCB Pharma, Zogenyx. He has been investigator for clinical trials for Advicenne Pharma, Eisai, UCB Pharma and Zogenyx. A Arzimanoglou has served as consultant, received honoraria for lectures from Arvelle therapeutics, Eisai, GW Pharma, UCB Pharma and Zogenix. On behalf of his Instiitution he has been investigator for clinical trials sponsored by Eisai, GW, UCB Pharma and Zogenix. JH Cross has acted as an investigator for studies with GW Pharma, Zogenix, Vitaflo and Marinius. She has been a speaker and on advisory boards for GW Pharma, Zogenix, and Nutricia; all remuneration has been paid to her department. Her research is supported by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at Great Ormond Street Hospital, NIHR, EPSRC, GOSH Charity, ERUK, the Waterloo Foundation. N Specchio has acted as an investigator for studies with Zogenix, Marinus, Biomarin, and Livanova, and has received consulting fees from Zogenix, Biomarin, Arvelle, Livanova., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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33. Management of Infantile Spasms During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
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Grinspan ZM, Mytinger JR, Baumer FM, Ciliberto MA, Cohen BH, Dlugos DJ, Harini C, Hussain SA, Joshi SM, Keator CG, Knupp KG, McGoldrick PE, Nickels KC, Park JT, Pasupuleti A, Patel AD, Shahid AM, Shellhaas RA, Shrey DW, Singh RK, Wolf SM, Yozawitz EG, Yuskaitis CJ, Waugh JL, and Pearl PL
- Subjects
- Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, Child, Electroencephalography, Humans, Infant, Practice Guidelines as Topic, SARS-CoV-2, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Spasms, Infantile diagnosis, Spasms, Infantile therapy
- Abstract
Circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic have mandated a change to standard management of infantile spasms. On April 6, 2020, the Child Neurology Society issued an online statement of immediate recommendations to streamline diagnosis and treatment of infantile spasms with utilization of telemedicine, outpatient studies, and selection of first-line oral therapies as initial treatment. The rationale for the recommendations and specific guidance including follow-up assessment are provided in this manuscript. These recommendations are indicated as enduring if intended to outlast the pandemic, and limited if intended only for the pandemic health care crisis but may be applicable to future disruptions of health care delivery.
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- 2020
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34. Crisis Standard of Care: Management of Infantile Spasms during COVID-19.
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Grinspan ZM, Mytinger JR, Baumer FM, Ciliberto MA, Cohen BH, Dlugos DJ, Harini C, Hussain SA, Joshi SM, Keator CG, Knupp KG, McGoldrick PE, Nickels KC, Park JT, Pasupuleti A, Patel AD, Pomeroy SL, Shahid AM, Shellhaas RA, Shrey DW, Singh RK, Wolf SM, Yozawitz EG, Yuskaitis CJ, Waugh JL, and Pearl PL
- Subjects
- Adrenocorticotropic Hormone therapeutic use, Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, Delivery of Health Care, Disease Management, Electroencephalography, Health Resources, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neurology, Prednisolone therapeutic use, SARS-CoV-2, Telemedicine, Tuberous Sclerosis diagnosis, Videoconferencing, Vigabatrin therapeutic use, Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Coronavirus Infections, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral, Spasms, Infantile diagnosis, Spasms, Infantile drug therapy, Standard of Care
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- 2020
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35. Depression and anxiety in children with epilepsy and other chronic health conditions: National estimates of prevalence and risk factors.
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LaGrant B, Marquis BO, Berg AT, and Grinspan ZM
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- Adolescent, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety psychology, Child, Child, Preschool, Chronic Disease psychology, Comorbidity, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression diagnosis, Depression psychology, Epilepsy diagnosis, Epilepsy psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, Anxiety epidemiology, Chronic Disease epidemiology, Depression epidemiology, Epilepsy epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: This study estimates the national prevalence of depression and anxiety among children with epilepsy and determines which demographic variables and comorbidities increase the risk of these psychopathologies. We also compare the rates of depression and anxiety in pediatric epilepsy with those of other chronic health conditions in childhood., Methods: We used the 2009-2010 National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs to identify children with epilepsy with and without depression and anxiety. We assessed demographic factors and comorbidities associated with depression and anxiety using weighted multivariable logistic regressions. The rates of psychiatric comorbidity in children with chronic conditions other than epilepsy were also determined., Results: The final sample included 1042 children over the age of five with epilepsy. After applying the sampling weights, we estimated that 283,000 children between 5 and 17 years of age have epilepsy in the United States (U.S.). Among these children, 25% have depression and/or anxiety. This figure was not significantly different from the rates seen among children with asthma (16.5%) or allergies (21.6%) but was significantly lower than the rate seen among children with migraines (43.2%). In our analyses of children with epilepsy, low-income children (regardless of race) and children whose needs for specialist care were unmet (relative to those whose needs were met) were more likely to have depression. Low-income black children were less likely to have anxiety than high-income white children. Gender, age, and epilepsy severity were unrelated to depression or anxiety., Conclusions: One in four U.S. children with epilepsy has depression and/or anxiety. Therefore, physicians should consider the various factors that are related to depression and anxiety in children with epilepsy so that at-risk children can be screened and managed appropriately., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest ZG receives research funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Foundation, the Epilepsy Research Fund, the Epilepsy Foundation, and from Weill Cornell Medicine. ZG also performs medical legal consulting work. The other authors have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2020
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36. Priorities for Newborn Screening of Genetic Epilepsy.
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Hess-Homeier DL, Cunniff C, and Grinspan ZM
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- Epilepsy genetics, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Epilepsy diagnosis, Neonatal Screening
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- 2019
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37. Comparative Effectiveness of Phenobarbital versus Levetiracetam for Infantile Epilepsy.
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Grinspan ZM, Shellhaas RA, and Berg AT
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- Child, Preschool, Comparative Effectiveness Research, Humans, Infant, Observational Studies as Topic, Anticonvulsants pharmacology, Epilepsy drug therapy, Levetiracetam pharmacology, Phenobarbital pharmacology
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- 2019
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38. Do Children with Special Health Care Needs with Anxiety have Unmet Health Care Needs? An Analysis of a National Survey.
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Green C, Jung HY, Wu X, Abramson E, Walkup JT, Ford JS, and Grinspan ZM
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- Adolescent, Aged, Anxiety epidemiology, Anxiety psychology, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Propensity Score, Statistics, Nonparametric, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anxiety complications, Health Services Needs and Demand, Needs Assessment
- Abstract
Objective: To describe differences in health care needs between Children with Special Health Care Needs (CSHCN) with and without anxiety and examine the association between anxiety and unmet health care needs., Methods: We analyzed data from the 2009/2010 national survey of CSHCN. The independent variable was anxiety. The main outcomes were health care needs and unmet needs. Covariates included demographics, other co-morbid conditions, and the presence and quality of a medical home. We used bivariate analyses and multivariable logistic regression to assess the relationships among anxiety, covariates, and the outcomes. We stratified our analysis by age (6-11 years, 12-17 years). Propensity score matched paired analysis was used as a sensitivity analysis., Results: Our final sample included 14,713 6-11 year-olds and 15,842 12-17-year-olds. Anxiety was present in 16% of 6-11 year-olds and 23% or 12-17 year-olds. In bivariate analyses, CSHCN with anxiety had increased health care needs and unmet needs, compared to CSHCN without anxiety. In multivariable analyses, only children 12-17 years old with anxiety had increased odds of having an unmet health care need compared to those children without anxiety (OR 1.44 [95% CI 1.17-1.78]). This was confirmed in the propensity score matching analysis (OR 1.12, [95% CI 1.02-1.22]). The specific unmet needs for older CSHCN with anxiety were mental health care (OR 1.54 [95% CI 1.09-2.17]) and well child checkups (OR 2.01 [95% CI 1.18-3.44])., Conclusion: Better integration of the care for mental and physical health is needed to ensure CSHCN with anxiety have all of their health care needs met.
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- 2019
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39. Immediate outcomes in early life epilepsy: A contemporary account.
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Berg AT, Wusthoff C, Shellhaas RA, Loddenkemper T, Grinspan ZM, Saneto RP, Knupp KG, Patel A, Sullivan JE, Kossoff EH, Chu CJ, Massey S, Valencia I, Keator C, Wirrell EC, Coryell J, Millichap JJ, and Gaillard WD
- Subjects
- Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Child, Preschool, Drug Resistance, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Seizures complications, Seizures drug therapy, Developmental Disabilities etiology, Spasms, Infantile complications, Spasms, Infantile drug therapy
- Abstract
Rationale: Early-life epilepsies (ELEs) include some of the most challenging forms of epilepsy to manage. Given recent diagnostic and therapeutic advances, a contemporary assessment of the immediate short-term outcomes can provide a valuable framework for identifying priorities and benchmarks for evaluating quality improvement efforts., Methods: Children with newly diagnosed epilepsy and onset <3 years were prospectively recruited through 17 US hospitals, from 2012 to 2015 and followed for 1 year after diagnosis. Short-term outcome included mortality, drug resistance, evolution of nonsyndromic epilepsy to infantile spasms (IS) and from IS to other epilepsies, and developmental decline. Multivariable analyses assessed the risk of each outcome., Results: Seven hundred seventy-five children were recruited, including 408 (53%) boys. Median age at onset was 7.5 months (interquartile range (IQR): 4.2-16.5), and 509 (66%) had onset in the first year of life. Of 22 deaths that occurred within one year of epilepsy diagnosis, 21 were children with epilepsy onset in infancy (<12 months). Of 680 children followed ≥6 months, 239 (35%) developed drug-resistant seizures; 34/227 (15%) infants with nonsyndromic epilepsy developed IS, and 48/210 (23%) initially presenting with IS developed additional seizure types. One hundred of 435 (23%) with initially typical development or only mild/equivocal delays at seizure onset, had clear developmental impairment within one year after initial diagnosis. Each outcome had a different set of predictors; however, younger age and impaired development at seizure onset were broadly indicative of poorer outcomes. Type of epilepsy and early identification of underlying cause were not reliable predictors of these outcomes., Conclusion: Early-life epilepsies carry a high risk of poor outcome which is evident shortly after epilepsy diagnosis. Onset in infancy and developmental delay is associated with an especially high risk, regardless of epilepsy type. The likelihood of poor outcomes is worrisome regardless of specific clinical profiles., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2019
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40. Automated detection of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy risk factors in electronic medical records using natural language processing.
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Barbour K, Hesdorffer DC, Tian N, Yozawitz EG, McGoldrick PE, Wolf S, McDonough TL, Nelson A, Loddenkemper T, Basma N, Johnson SB, and Grinspan ZM
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Drug Resistant Epilepsy mortality, Electronic Health Records, Epilepsy, Tonic-Clonic mortality, Humans, Neurosurgery statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Death, Sudden epidemiology, Epilepsy mortality, Natural Language Processing, Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is an important cause of mortality in epilepsy. However, there is a gap in how often providers counsel patients about SUDEP. One potential solution is to electronically prompt clinicians to provide counseling via automated detection of risk factors in electronic medical records (EMRs). We evaluated (1) the feasibility and generalizability of using regular expressions to identify risk factors in EMRs and (2) barriers to generalizability., Methods: Data included physician notes for 3000 patients from one medical center (home) and 1000 from five additional centers (away). Through chart review, we identified three SUDEP risk factors: (1) generalized tonic-clonic seizures, (2) refractory epilepsy, and (3) epilepsy surgery candidacy. Regular expressions of risk factors were manually created with home training data, and performance was evaluated with home test and away test data. Performance was evaluated by sensitivity, positive predictive value, and F-measure. Generalizability was defined as an absolute decrease in performance by <0.10 for away versus home test data. To evaluate underlying barriers to generalizability, we identified causes of errors seen more often in away data than home data. To demonstrate how small revisions can improve generalizability, we removed three "boilerplate" standard text phrases from away notes and repeated performance., Results: We observed high performance in home test data (F-measure range = 0.86-0.90), and low to high performance in away test data (F-measure range = 0.53-0.81). After removing three boilerplate phrases, away performance improved (F-measure range = 0.79-0.89) and generalizability was achieved for nearly all measures. The only significant barrier to generalizability was use of boilerplate phrases, causing 104 of 171 errors (61%) in away data., Significance: Regular expressions are a feasible and probably a generalizable method to identify variables related to SUDEP risk. Our methods may be implemented to create large patient cohorts for research and to generate electronic prompts for SUDEP counseling., (Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2019 International League Against Epilepsy.)
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- 2019
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41. The burden of pediatric status epilepticus: Epidemiology, morbidity, mortality, and costs.
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Gurcharran K and Grinspan ZM
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Status Epilepticus economics, Status Epilepticus epidemiology, Status Epilepticus etiology
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Purpose: To summarize the epidemiology, morbidity, mortality, and costs of status epilepticus (SE) in the pediatric population., Method: Review of the medical literature., Results: The overall incidence of pediatric SE is roughly 20 per 100,000 children per year, with overall mortality of 3%. Underlying etiology is the biggest risk factor for SE, with symptomatic (acute > remote) etiologies associated with worse outcomes. The most common cause of SE in children is febrile SE, though this entity occurs primarily in early childhood. After a first episode, the risk of recurrence is similar to the risk after a first unprovoked seizure (25-40%). SE is expensive, regularly costing more than $10,000 per episode and often more than $100,000 for refractory cases., Conclusion: SE is not an uncommon neurologic emergency and depending on the associated etiology can carry significant morbidity, mortality, and cost especially if treatment is not performed in a timely manner., (Copyright © 2018 British Epilepsy Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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42. Using EHRs to advance epilepsy care.
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Mbwana JS, Grinspan ZM, Bailey R, Berl M, Buchhalter J, Bumbut A, Danner Z, Glauser T, Glotstein A, Goodkin H, Jacobs B, Jones L, Kroner B, Lapham G, Loddenkemper T, Maraganore DM, Nordli D, and Gaillard WD
- Abstract
The improved use of Electronic Health Record (EHR) Systems provides an opportunity to improve the overall efficiency and quality of care of patients with epilepsy. Tools and strategies that may be incorporated into the use of EHRs include utilizing patient generated data, clinical decision support systems and natural language processing systems. Standardization of data from EHR systems may lead to improvement in clinical research through the creation of data collections and multi-center collaborations. Challenges to collaborative use of EHR Systems across centers include costs and the diversity of EHR systems.
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- 2019
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43. Expanding Health Information Exchange Improves Identification of Frequent Emergency Department Users.
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Han X, Lowry TY, Loo GT, Rabin EJ, Grinspan ZM, Kern LM, Kuperman GJ, and Shapiro JS
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- Adult, Continuity of Patient Care, Female, Health Services Needs and Demand, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Policy Making, Quality Improvement, Retrospective Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Health Information Exchange, Health Services Misuse statistics & numerical data, Hospital Information Systems, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Study Objective: Frequent emergency department (ED) users are of interest to policymakers and hospitals. The objective of this study is to examine the effect of health information exchange size on the identification of frequent ED users., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed data from Healthix, a health information exchange in New York that previously included 10 hospitals and then grew to 31 hospitals. We divided patients into 3 cohorts: high-frequency ED users with 4 or more visits in any 30-day period, medium-frequency ED users with 4 or more visits in any year, and infrequent ED users with fewer than 4 visits in any year. For both the smaller (10-hospital) and larger (31-hospital) health information exchanges, we compared the identification rate of frequent ED users that was based on hospital-specific data with the corresponding rates that were based on health information exchange data., Results: The smaller health information exchange (n=1,696,279 unique ED patients) identified 11.4% more high-frequency users (33,467 versus 30,057) and 9.5% more medium-frequency users (109,497 versus 100,014) than the hospital-specific data. The larger health information exchange (n=3,684,999) identified 19.6% more high-frequency patients (52,727 versus 44,079) and 18.2% more medium-frequency patients (222,574 versus 192,541) than the hospital-specific data. Expanding from the smaller health information exchange to the larger one, we found an absolute increase of 8.2% and 8.7% identified high- and medium-frequency users, respectively., Conclusion: Increasing health information exchange size more accurately reflects how patients access EDs and ultimately improves not only the total number of identified frequent ED users but also their identification rate., (Copyright © 2018 American College of Emergency Physicians. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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44. Neuroimaging of Early Life Epilepsy.
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Coryell J, Gaillard WD, Shellhaas RA, Grinspan ZM, Wirrell EC, Knupp KG, Wusthoff CJ, Keator C, Sullivan JE, Loddenkemper T, Patel A, Chu CJ, Massey S, Novotny EJ Jr, Saneto RP, and Berg AT
- Subjects
- Brain pathology, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Magnetic Resonance Imaging statistics & numerical data, Male, United States, Brain diagnostic imaging, Epilepsy diagnostic imaging, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Neuroimaging statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: We assessed the adherence to neuroimaging guidelines and the diagnostically relevant yield of neuroimaging in newly presenting early life epilepsy (ELE)., Methods: There were 775 children with a new diagnosis of epilepsy (<3 years old at onset) who were recruited through the ELE study at 17 US pediatric epilepsy centers (2012-2015) and managed prospectively for 1 year. The data were analyzed to assess the proportion of children who underwent neuroimaging, the type of neuroimaging, and abnormalities., Results: Of 725 children (93.5%) with neuroimaging, 714 had an MRI (87% with seizure protocols) and 11 had computed tomography or ultrasound only. Etiologically relevant abnormalities were present in 290 individuals (40%) and included: an acquired injury in 97 (13.4%), malformations of cortical development in 56 (7.7%), and other diffuse disorders of brain development in 51 (7.0%). Neuroimaging was abnormal in 160 of 262 (61%) children with abnormal development at diagnosis versus 113 of 463 (24%) children with typical development. Neuroimaging abnormalities were most common in association with focal seizure semiology (40%), spasms (47%), or unclear semiology (42%). In children without spasms or focal semiology with typical development, 29 of 185 (16%) had imaging abnormalities. Pathogenic genetic variants were identified in 53 of 121 (44%) children with abnormal neuroimaging in whom genetic testing was performed., Conclusions: Structural abnormalities occur commonly in ELE, and adherence to neuroimaging guidelines is high at US pediatric epilepsy centers. These data support the universal adoption of imaging guidelines because the yield is substantially high, even in the lowest risk group., Competing Interests: POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: Dr Wirrell has received a consulting fee from Biomarin; Dr Knupp has served as a consultant for Zogenix and has an additional grant funded by the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Foundation; Dr Sullivan has served as an expert witness in various cases that involve seizures in children in which he was not subpoenaed. Subjects who were enrolled in this study by Dr Sullivan were seen as part of routine clinical care; Dr Patel discloses consulting with Greenwich Biosciences, UCB Pharma, Supernus, and LivaNova. He has pending or active grants with the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Foundation, Upsher-Smith, Greenwich Biosciences, and LivaNova; Dr Loddenkemper discloses board membership service on the council (and as president) of the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society and the American Board of Clinical Neurophysiology. He serves as committee chair at the American Epilepsy Society (Special Interest Group and Investigator Workshop committees) and as founder and consortium principal investigator of the pediatric Status Epilepticus Research Group. He received grant support from federal epilepsy-related groups as well as from pharmaceutical companies, including research support from the National Institutes of Health, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, the Epilepsy Research Fund, the American Epilepsy Society, the Epilepsy Foundation of America, the Epilepsy Therapy Project, the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Foundation, and Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy, and he received research grants from Lundbeck, Eisai, Upsher-Smith, Mallinckrodt, Sage, and Pfizer. Dr Loddenkemper is part of pending patent applications to detect and predict seizures and to diagnose epilepsy; the other authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2018 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2018
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45. Mechanism of Hyponatremia in Community-Acquired Pneumonia: Does B-type Natriuretic Peptide Play a Causative Role?
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Hausman-Kedem M, Reif S, Danino D, Limor R, Grinspan ZM, Yerushalmi-Feler A, Ben-Tov A, and Birger A
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Community-Acquired Infections blood, Community-Acquired Infections complications, Community-Acquired Infections urine, Electrolytes blood, Electrolytes urine, Female, Humans, Hyponatremia blood, Hyponatremia urine, Infant, Male, Pneumonia blood, Pneumonia urine, Hyponatremia etiology, Natriuretic Peptide, Brain blood, Peptide Fragments blood, Pneumonia complications
- Abstract
Objective: Hyponatremia is a well-known sequela of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) has a natriuretic effect and was found to be elevated in patients with CAP. We investigated whether BNP has a role in the pathophysiology of hyponatremia in pediatric CAP., Methods: Serum and urine electrolytes and osmolality, as well as NT-pro-BNP (N-BNP), were obtained in 49 hospitalized pediatric patients with CAP (29 with hyponatremia, 20 with normal sodium levels., Results: Urine sodium levels were lower in the hyponatremic group compared with the normonatremic group (24.3 meq/L vs 66.7 meq/L, P = 0.006). No difference in N-BNP levels was found between groups (median, 103.8 vs 100.1; P = 0.06; interquartile range, 63.7-263.3 pg/mL vs 47.4-146.4 pg/mL). N-BNP was not associated with serum or urinary sodium levels., Conclusions: These results indicate that BNP is unlikely to play a causative role in the mechanism of hyponatremia in CAP.
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- 2018
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46. Outcomes after acute symptomatic seizures in neonates.
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Glass HC, Grinspan ZM, and Shellhaas RA
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- Electroencephalography, Epilepsy mortality, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Prognosis, Seizures mortality, Epilepsy diagnosis, Seizures diagnosis
- Abstract
Acute symptomatic seizures are a common sign of neurological dysfunction and brain injury in neonates and occur in approximately one to three per 1000 live births. Seizures in neonates are usually a sign of underlying brain injury and, as such, are commonly associated with adverse outcomes. Neurological morbidities in survivors often co-occur; epilepsy, cerebral palsy, and intellectual disability often occur together in the most severely affected children. Risk factors for adverse outcome include prematurity, low Apgar scores, low pH on the first day of life, seizure onset <24 or >72 h after birth, abnormal neonatal neurological examination, abnormal neonatal electroencephalographic background, status epilepticus, and presence and pattern of brain injury (particularly deep gray or brainstem injury). Despite this list of potential indicators, accurate prediction of outcome in a given child remains challenging. There is great need for long-term, multicenter studies to examine risk factors for, and pathogenesis of, adverse outcomes following acute symptomatic seizures in neonates., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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47. Population-Based Assessment of the Long-Term Risk of Seizures in Survivors of Stroke.
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Merkler AE, Gialdini G, Lerario MP, Parikh NS, Morris NA, Kummer B, Dunn L, Reznik ME, Murthy SB, Navi BB, Grinspan ZM, Iadecola C, and Kamel H
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Discharge statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Time Factors, United States, Cerebral Hemorrhage complications, Seizures epidemiology, Stroke epidemiology, Survivors statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: We sought to determine the long-term risk of seizures after stroke according to age, sex, race, and stroke subtype., Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study using administrative claims from 2 complementary patient data sets. First, we analyzed data from all emergency department visits and hospitalizations in California, Florida, and New York from 2005 to 2013. Second, we evaluated inpatient and outpatient claims from a nationally representative 5% random sample of Medicare beneficiaries. Our cohort consisted of all adults at the time of acute stroke hospitalization without a prior history of seizures. Our outcome was seizure occurring after hospital discharge for stroke. Poisson regression and demographic data were used to calculate age-, sex-, and race-standardized incidence rate ratios (IRR)., Results: Among 777 276 patients in the multistate cohort, the annual incidence of seizures was 1.68% (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.67%-1.70%) after stroke versus 0.15% (95% CI, 0.15%-0.15%) among the general population (IRR, 7.3; 95% CI, 7.3-7.4). By 8 years, the cumulative rate of any emergency department visit or hospitalization for seizure was 9.27% (95% CI, 9.16%-9.38%) after stroke versus 1.21% (95% CI, 1.21%-1.22%) in the general population. Stroke was more strongly associated with a subsequent seizure among patients <65 years of age (IRR, 12.0; 95% CI, 11.9-12.2) than in patients ≥65 years of age (IRR, 5.5; 95% CI, 5.4-5.5) and in the multistate analysis, the association between stroke and seizure was stronger among nonwhite patients (IRR, 11.0; 95% CI, 10.8-11.2) than among white patients (IRR, 7.3; 95% CI, 7.2-7.4). Risks were especially elevated after intracerebral hemorrhage (IRR, 13.3; 95% CI, 13.0-13.6) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (IRR, 13.2; 95% CI, 12.8-13.7). Our study of Medicare beneficiaries confirmed these findings., Conclusions: Almost 10% of patients with stroke will develop seizures within a decade. Hemorrhagic stroke, nonwhite race, and younger age seem to confer the greatest risk of developing seizures., (© 2018 American Heart Association, Inc.)
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- 2018
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48. Comparative Effectiveness of Levetiracetam vs Phenobarbital for Infantile Epilepsy.
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Grinspan ZM, Shellhaas RA, Coryell J, Sullivan JE, Wirrell EC, Mytinger JR, Gaillard WD, Kossoff EH, Valencia I, Knupp KG, Wusthoff C, Keator C, Ryan N, Loddenkemper T, Chu CJ, Novotny EJ Jr, Millichap J, and Berg AT
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Drug Prescriptions statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, United States, Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Epilepsy drug therapy, Levetiracetam therapeutic use, Phenobarbital therapeutic use
- Abstract
Importance: More than half of infants with new-onset epilepsy have electroencephalographic and clinical features that do not conform to known electroclinical syndromes (ie, nonsyndromic epilepsy). Levetiracetam and phenobarbital are the most commonly prescribed medications for epilepsy in infants, but their comparative effectiveness is unknown., Objective: To compare the effectiveness of levetiracetam vs phenobarbital for nonsyndromic infantile epilepsy., Design, Setting, and Participants: The Early Life Epilepsy Study-a prospective, multicenter, observational cohort study conducted from March 1, 2012, to April 30, 2015, in 17 US medical centers-enrolled infants with nonsyndromic epilepsy and a first afebrile seizure between 1 month and 1 year of age., Exposures: Use of levetiracetam or phenobarbital as initial monotherapy within 1 year of the first seizure., Main Outcomes and Measures: The binary outcome was freedom from monotherapy failure at 6 months, defined as no second prescribed antiepileptic medication and freedom from seizures beginning within 3 months of initiation of treatment. Outcomes were adjusted for demographics, epilepsy characteristics, and neurologic history, as well as for observable selection bias using propensity score weighting and for within-center correlation using generalized estimating equations., Results: Of the 155 infants in the study (81 girls and 74 boys; median age, 4.7 months [interquartile range, 3.0-7.1 months]), those treated with levetiracetam (n = 117) were older at the time of the first seizure than those treated with phenobarbital (n = 38) (median age, 5.2 months [interquartile range, 3.5-8.2 months] vs 3.0 months [interquartile range, 2.0-4.4 months]; P < .001). There were no other significant bivariate differences. Infants treated with levetiracetam were free from monotherapy failure more often than those treated with phenobarbital (47 [40.2%] vs 6 [15.8%]; P = .01). The superiority of levetiracetam over phenobarbital persisted after adjusting for covariates, observable selection bias, and within-center correlation (odds ratio, 4.2; 95% CI, 1.1-16; number needed to treat, 3.5 [95% CI, 1.7-60])., Conclusions and Relevance: Levetiracetam may have superior effectiveness compared with phenobarbital for initial monotherapy of nonsyndromic epilepsy in infants. If 100 infants who received phenobarbital were instead treated with levetiracetam, 44 would be free from monotherapy failure instead of 16 by the estimates in this study. Randomized clinical trials are necessary to confirm these findings.
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- 2018
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49. Why West? Comparisons of clinical, genetic and molecular features of infants with and without spasms.
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Berg AT, Chakravorty S, Koh S, Grinspan ZM, Shellhaas RA, Saneto RP, Wirrell EC, Coryell J, Chu CJ, Mytinger JR, Gaillard WD, Valencia I, Knupp KG, Loddenkemper T, Sullivan JE, Poduri A, Millichap JJ, Keator C, Wusthoff C, Ryan N, Dobyns WB, and Hegde M
- Subjects
- Age of Onset, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Gene Ontology, Gestational Age, Humans, Infant, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Prospective Studies, Spasms, Infantile epidemiology, Spasms, Infantile etiology, Spasms, Infantile genetics, Spasms, Infantile physiopathology
- Abstract
Infantile spasms are the defining seizures of West syndrome, a severe form of early life epilepsy with poorly-understood pathophysiology. We present a novel comparative analysis of infants with spasms versus other seizure-types and identify clinical, etiological, and molecular-genetic factors preferentially predisposing to spasms. We compared ages, clinical etiologies, and associated-genes between spasms and non-spasms groups in a multicenter cohort of 509 infants (<12months) with newly-diagnosed epilepsy. Gene ontology and pathway enrichment analysis of clinical laboratory-confirmed pathogenic variant-harboring genes was performed. Pathways, functions, and cellular compartments between spasms and non-spasms groups were compared. Spasms onset age was similar in infants initially presenting with spasms (6.1 months) versus developing spasms as a later seizure type (6.9 months) but lower in the non-spasms group (4.7 months, p<0.0001). This pattern held across most etiological categories. Gestational age negatively correlated with spasms onset-age (r = -0.29, p<0.0001) but not with non-spasm seizure age. Spasms were significantly preferentially associated with broad developmental and regulatory pathways, whereas motor functions and pathways including cellular response to stimuli, cell motility and ion transport were preferentially enriched in non-spasms. Neuronal cell-body organelles preferentially associated with spasms, while, axonal, dendritic, and synaptic regions preferentially associated with other seizures. Spasms are a clinically and biologically distinct infantile seizure type. Comparative clinical-epidemiological analyses identify the middle of the first year as the time of peak expression regardless of etiology. The inverse association with gestational age suggests the preterm brain must reach a certain post-conceptional, not just chronological, neurodevelopmental stage before spasms manifest. Clear differences exist between the biological pathways leading to spasms versus other seizure types and suggest that spasms result from dysregulation of multiple developmental pathways and involve different cellular components than other seizure types. This deeper level of understanding may guide investigations into pathways most critical to target in future precision medicine efforts.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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50. Common terms for rare epilepsies: Synonyms, associated terms, and links to structured vocabularies.
- Author
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Grinspan ZM, Tian N, Yozawitz EG, McGoldrick PE, Wolf SM, McDonough TL, Nelson A, Hafeez B, Johnson SB, and Hesdorffer DC
- Abstract
Identifying individuals with rare epilepsy syndromes in electronic data sources is difficult, in part because of missing codes in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) system. Our objectives were the following: (1) to describe the representation of rare epilepsies in other medical vocabularies, to identify gaps; and (2) to compile synonyms and associated terms for rare epilepsies, to facilitate text and natural language processing tools for cohort identification and population-based surveillance. We describe the representation of 33 epilepsies in 3 vocabularies: Orphanet, SNOMED-CT, and UMLS-Metathesaurus. We compiled terms via 2 surveys, correspondence with parent advocates, and review of web resources and standard vocabularies. UMLS-Metathesaurus had entries for all 33 epilepsies, Orphanet 32, and SNOMED-CT 25. The vocabularies had redundancies and missing phenotypes. Emerging epilepsies ( SCN2A-, SCN8A-, KCNQ2-, SLC13A5- , and SYNGAP -related epilepsies) were underrepresented. Survey and correspondence respondents included 160 providers, 375 caregivers, and 11 advocacy group leaders. Each epilepsy syndrome had a median of 15 (range 6-28) synonyms. Nineteen had associated terms, with a median of 4 (range 1-41). We conclude that medical vocabularies should fill gaps in representation of rare epilepsies to improve their value for epilepsy research. We encourage epilepsy researchers to use this resource to develop tools to identify individuals with rare epilepsies in electronic data sources.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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