| Literature DB >> 33772508 |
Jie Zhang1, Guohong Chen2, Juan Wang3, Yuwu Jiang1, Zhixian Yang1, Kaili Xu2, Jing Peng4, Shuizhen Zhou5, Li Jiang3, Baomin Li6, Dongqing Zhang6, Zhisheng Liu7, Lijuan Huang7, Chunhong Chen8, Fang Fang8, Yanhui Chen9, Yi Wu9, Jianmin Zhong10, Jian Zha10, Fei Yin4, Lifei Yu5, Ye Wu1.
Abstract
To determine the efficacy of ketogenic diet (KD) therapy on adrenocorticotropic hormone- (ACTH) or corticosteroid-resistant infantile spasm (IS), and identify relevant associated factors. A prospective controlled study was undertaken at 10 tertiary children's medical centres in mainland China. Participants were non-randomly assigned to KD therapy or control (adjustment of antiepileptic drugs). The primary outcome was the reduction in spasms and remission of hypsarrhythmia at the 16th week, divided into Grade I (spasm-free for at least one week with hypsarrhythmia remission), Grade II (≥50% spasm reduction and/or hypsarrhythmia remission) and Grade III (<50% spasm reduction with hypsarrhythmia). In total, 227 patients were recruited and assigned to the KD (135 patients) and control (92 patients) groups. The efficacy in the KD group was superior to that in the control group (Grade I: 13.4% vs. 10.9%; Grade II: 40.7% vs. 20.7%, p=0.025). Patients with a ketogenic ratio <3:1 had a higher rate of Grade I than those with ketogenic ratio ≥3:1 (66.7% vs. 33.3%, p=0.037). No significant correlation was found between the efficacy of KD and level of serum ketosis, aetiology of IS, or age. The efficacy of KD therapy was superior to adjustment of oral antiepileptic drugs in children with ACTH- or corticosteroid-resistant infantile spasms.Entities:
Keywords: efficacy; genomics; infantile spasms; ketogenic diet
Year: 2021 PMID: 33772508 DOI: 10.1684/epd.2021.1256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epileptic Disord ISSN: 1294-9361 Impact factor: 1.819