TY - JOUR
T1 - Seizures in Alzheimer disease
T2 - Who, when, and how common?
AU - Scarmeas, Nikolaos
AU - Honig, Lawrence S.
AU - Choi, Hyunmi
AU - Cantero, Julio
AU - Brandt, Jason
AU - Blacker, Deborah
AU - Albert, Marilyn
AU - Amatniek, Joan C.
AU - Marder, Karen
AU - Bell, Karen
AU - Hauser, W. Allen
AU - Stern, Yaakov
PY - 2009/8
Y1 - 2009/8
N2 - Background: Transient symptoms in Alzheimer disease (AD) are frequent and include seizures, syncope, and episodes of inattention or confusion. The incidence of seizures in AD and predictors of which patients with AD might be more predisposed to them is based primarily on retrospective studies and is not well established. Objective: To determine the incidence and predictors of new-onset unprovoked seizures. Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Three academic centers. Patients: Four hundred fifty-three patients with probable AD observed prospectively from mild disease stages since 1992. Main Outcome Measure: Informant interviews every 6 months included questions about whether the patient had a seizure (convulsion, fainting, or "funny" spell) and whether diagnosis or treatment for epilepsy or seizure was made. Two epileptologists independently retrospectively reviewed all available medical records for 52 patients with positive responses to either of these questions, and using a specific checklist form, events were diagnosed as to whether they were unprovoked seizures (intrarater concordance, κ=0.67). Diagnosis of unprovoked seizures constituted the event in survival analyses. Potential predictors included sex, age, race/ ethnicity, educational achievement, duration of illness, baseline cognition and function, depression, medical comorbidities, and time-dependent use of cholinesterase inhibitors and neuroleptic agents, apolipoprotein E genotype, and previous electroencephalographic findings. Results: Over the course of 3518 visit-assessments (per patient: mean, 7.8; maximum, 27), 7 patients (1.5%) developed seizures. Younger age was associated with higher risk (hazard ratio, 1.23; 95% confidence interval, 1.08-1.41; P=.003 for each additional year of age) of seizure incidence. No other predictor was significant. The overall incidence of seizures was low (418 per 100 000 personyears of observation) although significantly higher than expected for idiopathic unprovoked seizures in similar age ranges of the general population (hazard ratio, 8.06; 95% confidence interval, 3.23-16.61). Conclusions: Unprovoked seizures are uncommon in AD, but they do occur more frequently than in the general population. Younger age is a risk factor for seizures in AD.
AB - Background: Transient symptoms in Alzheimer disease (AD) are frequent and include seizures, syncope, and episodes of inattention or confusion. The incidence of seizures in AD and predictors of which patients with AD might be more predisposed to them is based primarily on retrospective studies and is not well established. Objective: To determine the incidence and predictors of new-onset unprovoked seizures. Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Three academic centers. Patients: Four hundred fifty-three patients with probable AD observed prospectively from mild disease stages since 1992. Main Outcome Measure: Informant interviews every 6 months included questions about whether the patient had a seizure (convulsion, fainting, or "funny" spell) and whether diagnosis or treatment for epilepsy or seizure was made. Two epileptologists independently retrospectively reviewed all available medical records for 52 patients with positive responses to either of these questions, and using a specific checklist form, events were diagnosed as to whether they were unprovoked seizures (intrarater concordance, κ=0.67). Diagnosis of unprovoked seizures constituted the event in survival analyses. Potential predictors included sex, age, race/ ethnicity, educational achievement, duration of illness, baseline cognition and function, depression, medical comorbidities, and time-dependent use of cholinesterase inhibitors and neuroleptic agents, apolipoprotein E genotype, and previous electroencephalographic findings. Results: Over the course of 3518 visit-assessments (per patient: mean, 7.8; maximum, 27), 7 patients (1.5%) developed seizures. Younger age was associated with higher risk (hazard ratio, 1.23; 95% confidence interval, 1.08-1.41; P=.003 for each additional year of age) of seizure incidence. No other predictor was significant. The overall incidence of seizures was low (418 per 100 000 personyears of observation) although significantly higher than expected for idiopathic unprovoked seizures in similar age ranges of the general population (hazard ratio, 8.06; 95% confidence interval, 3.23-16.61). Conclusions: Unprovoked seizures are uncommon in AD, but they do occur more frequently than in the general population. Younger age is a risk factor for seizures in AD.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=68549089091&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1001/archneurol.2009.130
DO - 10.1001/archneurol.2009.130
M3 - Article
C2 - 19667221
AN - SCOPUS:68549089091
SN - 0003-9942
VL - 66
SP - 992
EP - 997
JO - Archives of Neurology
JF - Archives of Neurology
IS - 8
ER -