Literature DB >> 29631157

Presurgical depression and anxiety are not associated with worse epilepsy surgery outcome five years postoperatively.

Hamada H Altalib1, Anne T Berg2, Xiangyu Cong3, Barbara G Vickrey4, Michael R Sperling5, Shlomo Shinnar6, John T Langfitt7, Thaddeus S Walczak8, Carl W Bazil9, Nitin Sukumar3, Orrin Devinsky10.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Anxiety and depression have been associated with poor seizure control after epilepsy surgery. This study explored the effect of presurgical anxiety or depression on two- and five-year seizure control outcomes.
METHODS: Adult subjects were enrolled between 1996 and 2001 in a multicenter prospective study to evaluate outcomes of resective epilepsy surgery. A Poisson regression was used to analyze the association of depression and anxiety with surgical outcome, while adjusting for gender, age, ethnicity, number of years with seizures, and presence of mesial temporal sclerosis.
RESULTS: The relative risk (RR) of presurgical depression on two-year seizure-free outcome in this cohort is 1.12 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.84-1.49) and 1.06 (CI, 0.73-1.55) on five-year seizure free outcome. The RR of presurgical anxiety on two-year seizure outcome is 0.73 (CI, 0.50-1.07) and 0.70 (CI, 0.43-1.17) on five-year seizure outcome. When including Engel classes I and II, the RRs of presurgical depression, anxiety, or both two years after surgery were 0.96 (p=0.59), 0.73 (p<0.05), and 0.97 (p=0.70), respectively, and they were 0.97 (p=0.82), 0.84 (p=0.32), and 0.89 (p=0.15), respectively, five years after surgery. Only presurgical anxiety was associated with worse epilepsy surgery outcome two year after surgery but not at five years postsurgery. Depression was not a risk factor for poor epilepsy surgical outcome in the long term.
CONCLUSION: These findings from a prospective study that utilized a standardized protocol for psychiatric and seizure outcome assessment suggest that presurgical mood disorders have no substantial impact on postsurgical seizure outcome for up to five years after surgery.
Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cohort; Epidemiology; Neuropsychiatry

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29631157     DOI: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2018.01.040

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsy Behav        ISSN: 1525-5050            Impact factor:   2.937


  2 in total

Review 1.  Psychiatric Comorbidities in People With Epilepsy.

Authors:  Marco Mula; Andres M Kanner; Nathalie Jetté; Josemir W Sander
Journal:  Neurol Clin Pract       Date:  2021-04

2.  What Matters to You? Looking Beyond Seizure Freedom Following Epilepsy Surgery.

Authors:  Adriana Bermeo-Ovalle
Journal:  Epilepsy Curr       Date:  2021-07-17       Impact factor: 7.500

  2 in total

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