Wesley T Kerr1, Emily A Janio2, Chelsea T Braesch2, Justine M Le2, Jessica M Hori2, Akash B Patel2, Norma L Gallardo2, Janar Bauirjan2, Andrea M Chau2, Eric S Hwang2, Emily C Davis2, Albert Buchard2, David Torres-Barba2, Shannon D'Ambrosio2, Mona Al Banna2, Andrew Y Cho2, Jerome Engel3, Mark S Cohen4, John M Stern5. 1. Department of Biomathematics, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States; Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States; Department of Internal Medicine, Eisenhower Medical Center, Rancho Mirage, CA, United States. Electronic address: WesleyTK@UCLA.edu. 2. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States. 3. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States; Departments of Neurology and Neurobiology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States; Brain Research Institute, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States. 4. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States; Departments of Neurology and Neurobiology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States; Departments of Radiology, Psychology, Biomedical Physics, and Bioengineering, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States; California NanoSystems Institute, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, United States. 5. Departments of Neurology and Neurobiology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Psychogenic nonepileptic seizure (PNES) is a common diagnosis after evaluation of medication resistant or atypical seizures with video-electroencephalographic monitoring (VEM), but usually follows a long delay after the development of seizures, during which patients are treated for epilepsy. Therefore, more readily available diagnostic tools are needed for earlier identification of patients at risk for PNES. A tool based on patient-reported psychosocial history would be especially beneficial because it could be implemented in the outpatient clinic. METHODS: Based on the data from 1375 patients with VEM-confirmed diagnoses, we used logistic regression to compare the frequency of specific patient-reported historical events, demographic information, age of onset, and delay from first seizure until VEM in five mutually exclusive groups of patients: epileptic seizures (ES), PNES, physiologic nonepileptic seizure-like events (PSLE), mixed PNES plus ES, and inconclusive monitoring. To determine the diagnostic utility of this information to differentiate PNES only from ES only, we used multivariate piecewise-linear logistic regression trained using retrospective data from chart review and validated based on data from 246 prospective standardized interviews. RESULTS: The prospective area under the curve of our weighted multivariate piecewise-linear by-sex score was 73%, with the threshold that maximized overall retrospective accuracy resulting in a prospective sensitivity of 74% (95% CI: 70-79%) and prospective specificity of 71% (95% CI: 64-82%). The linear model and piecewise linear without an interaction term for sex had very similar performance statistics. In the multivariate piecewise-linear sex-split predictive model, the significant factors positively associated with ES were history of febrile seizures, current employment or active student status, history of traumatic brain injury (TBI), and longer delay from first seizure until VEM. The significant factors associated with PNES were female sex, older age of onset, mild TBI, and significant stressful events with sexual abuse, in particular, increasing the likelihood of PNES. Delays longer than 20years, age of onset after 31years for men, and age of onset after 40years for women had no additional effect on the likelihood of PNES. DISCUSSION: Our promising results suggest that an objective score has the potential to serve as an early outpatient screening tool to identify patients with greater likelihood of PNES when considered in combination with other factors. In addition, our analysis suggests that sexual abuse, more than other psychological stressors including physical abuse, is more associated with PNES. There was a trend of increasing frequency of PNES for women during childbearing years and plateauing outside those years that was not observed in men.
OBJECTIVE:Psychogenic nonepilepticseizure (PNES) is a common diagnosis after evaluation of medication resistant or atypical seizures with video-electroencephalographic monitoring (VEM), but usually follows a long delay after the development of seizures, during which patients are treated for epilepsy. Therefore, more readily available diagnostic tools are needed for earlier identification of patients at risk for PNES. A tool based on patient-reported psychosocial history would be especially beneficial because it could be implemented in the outpatient clinic. METHODS: Based on the data from 1375 patients with VEM-confirmed diagnoses, we used logistic regression to compare the frequency of specific patient-reported historical events, demographic information, age of onset, and delay from first seizure until VEM in five mutually exclusive groups of patients: epileptic seizures (ES), PNES, physiologic nonepileptic seizure-like events (PSLE), mixed PNES plus ES, and inconclusive monitoring. To determine the diagnostic utility of this information to differentiate PNES only from ES only, we used multivariate piecewise-linear logistic regression trained using retrospective data from chart review and validated based on data from 246 prospective standardized interviews. RESULTS: The prospective area under the curve of our weighted multivariate piecewise-linear by-sex score was 73%, with the threshold that maximized overall retrospective accuracy resulting in a prospective sensitivity of 74% (95% CI: 70-79%) and prospective specificity of 71% (95% CI: 64-82%). The linear model and piecewise linear without an interaction term for sex had very similar performance statistics. In the multivariate piecewise-linear sex-split predictive model, the significant factors positively associated with ES were history of febrile seizures, current employment or active student status, history of traumatic brain injury (TBI), and longer delay from first seizure until VEM. The significant factors associated with PNES were female sex, older age of onset, mild TBI, and significant stressful events with sexual abuse, in particular, increasing the likelihood of PNES. Delays longer than 20years, age of onset after 31years for men, and age of onset after 40years for women had no additional effect on the likelihood of PNES. DISCUSSION: Our promising results suggest that an objective score has the potential to serve as an early outpatient screening tool to identify patients with greater likelihood of PNES when considered in combination with other factors. In addition, our analysis suggests that sexual abuse, more than other psychological stressors including physical abuse, is more associated with PNES. There was a trend of increasing frequency of PNES for women during childbearing years and plateauing outside those years that was not observed in men.
Authors: Wesley T Kerr; Emily A Janio; Chelsea T Braesch; Justine M Le; Jessica M Hori; Akash B Patel; Norma L Gallardo; Janar Bauirjan; Shannon R D'Ambrosio; Andrea M Chau; Eric S Hwang; Emily C Davis; Albert Buchard; David Torres-Barba; Mona Al Banna; Sarah E Barritt; Andrew Y Cho; Jerome Engel; Mark S Cohen; John M Stern Journal: Epilepsia Date: 2017-09-12 Impact factor: 5.864
Authors: Wesley T Kerr; Stefan T Nguyen; Andrew Y Cho; Edward P Lau; Daniel H Silverman; Pamela K Douglas; Navya M Reddy; Ariana Anderson; Jennifer Bramen; Noriko Salamon; John M Stern; Mark S Cohen Journal: Front Neurol Date: 2013-04-03 Impact factor: 4.003
Authors: Kerry McInnes; Christopher L Friesen; Diane E MacKenzie; David A Westwood; Shaun G Boe Journal: PLoS One Date: 2017-04-11 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Wesley T Kerr; Andrea M Chau; Emily A Janio; Chelsea T Braesch; Justine M Le; Jessica M Hori; Akash B Patel; Norma L Gallardo; Janar Bauirjan; Corinne H Allas; Amir H Karimi; Eric S Hwang; Emily C Davis; Albert Buchard; David Torres-Barba; Shannon D'Ambrosio; Mona Al Banna; Andrew Y Cho; Jerome Engel; Mark S Cohen; John M Stern Journal: Seizure Date: 2019-03-05 Impact factor: 3.184
Authors: Wesley T Kerr; Emily A Janio; Andrea M Chau; Chelsea T Braesch; Justine M Le; Jessica M Hori; Akash B Patel; Norma L Gallardo; Corinne H Allas; Amir H Karimi; Ishita Dubey; Siddhika S Sreenivasan; Janar Bauirjan; Eric S Hwang; Emily C Davis; Shannon R D'Ambrosio; Mona Al Banna; Rajarshi Mazumder; Ting Wu; Zachary A DeCant; Michael G Gibbs; Edward Chang; Xingruo Zhang; Andrew Y Cho; Nicholas J Beimer; Jerome Engel; Mark S Cohen; John M Stern Journal: Epilepsy Behav Date: 2020-11-13 Impact factor: 2.937
Authors: Wesley T Kerr; Xingruo Zhang; Chloe E Hill; Emily A Janio; Andrea M Chau; Chelsea T Braesch; Justine M Le; Jessica M Hori; Akash B Patel; Corinne H Allas; Amir H Karimi; Ishita Dubey; Siddhika S Sreenivasan; Norma L Gallardo; Janar Bauirjan; Eric S Hwang; Emily C Davis; Shannon R D'Ambrosio; Mona Al Banna; Andrew Y Cho; Sandra R Dewar; Jerome Engel; Jamie D Feusner; John M Stern Journal: Seizure Date: 2021-02-15 Impact factor: 3.184
Authors: Wesley T Kerr; Xingruo Zhang; Chloe E Hill; Emily A Janio; Andrea M Chau; Chelsea T Braesch; Justine M Le; Jessica M Hori; Akash B Patel; Corinne H Allas; Amir H Karimi; Ishita Dubey; Siddhika S Sreenivasan; Norma L Gallardo; Janar Bauirjan; Eric S Hwang; Emily C Davis; Shannon R D'Ambrosio; Mona Al Banna; Andrew Y Cho; Sandra R Dewar; Jerome Engel; Jamie D Feusner; John M Stern Journal: Seizure Date: 2021-02-09 Impact factor: 3.184
Authors: Steven Lenio; Wesley T Kerr; Meagan Watson; Sarah Baker; Chad Bush; Alex Rajic; Laura Strom Journal: Epilepsy Behav Date: 2021-02-02 Impact factor: 2.937
Authors: Nicholas J Janocko; Jin Jing; Ziwei Fan; Diane L Teagarden; Hannah K Villarreal; Matthew L Morton; Olivia Groover; David W Loring; Daniel L Drane; M Brandon Westover; Ioannis Karakis Journal: Epilepsy Res Date: 2021-01-21 Impact factor: 3.045
Authors: John M Gledhill; Elizabeth J Brand; John R Pollard; Richard D St Clair; Todd M Wallach; Peter B Crino Journal: Neurology Date: 2021-01-25 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: Wesley T Kerr; Xingruo Zhang; Emily A Janio; Amir H Karimi; Corinne H Allas; Ishita Dubey; Siddhika S Sreenivasan; Janar Bauirjan; Shannon R D'Ambrosio; Mona Al Banna; Andrew Y Cho; Jerome Engel; Mark S Cohen; Jamie D Feusner; John M Stern Journal: Epilepsy Behav Date: 2021-01-01 Impact factor: 2.937