Immediate and long‐term management practices of acute symptomatic seizures and epileptiform abnormalities: A cross‐sectional international survey

Author:

Punia Vineet1ORCID,Daruvala Sanaya2,Dhakar Monica B.2,Zafar Sahar F.3ORCID,Rubinos Clio4ORCID,Ayub Neishay2,Hirsch Lawrence J.5ORCID,Sivaraju Adithya5ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Epilepsy Center, Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio USA

2. Department of Neurology Warren Alpert School of Medicine Providence Rhode Island USA

3. Department of Neurology Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

4. University of North Carolina Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

5. Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Department of Neurology Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesAcute symptomatic seizures (ASyS) and epileptiform abnormalities (EAs) on electroencephalography (EEG) are commonly encountered following acute brain injury. Their immediate and long‐term management remains poorly investigated. We conducted an international survey to understand their current management.MethodsThe cross‐sectional web‐based survey of 21 fixed‐response questions was based on a common clinical encounter: convulsive or suspected ASyS following an acute brain injury. Respondents selected the option that best matched their real‐world practice. Respondents completing the survey were compared with those who accessed but did not complete it.ResultsA total of 783 individuals (44 countries) accessed the survey; 502 completed it. Almost everyone used anti‐seizure medications (ASMs) for secondary prophylaxis after convulsive or electrographic ASyS (95.4% and 97.2%, respectively). ASM dose escalation after convulsive ASyS depends on continuous EEG (cEEG) findings: most often increased after electrographic seizures (78% of respondents), followed by lateralized periodic discharges (LPDs; 41%) and sporadic epileptiform discharges (sEDs; 17.5%). If cEEG is unrevealing, one in five respondents discontinue ASMs after a week. In the absence of convulsive and electrographic ASyS, a large proportion of respondents start ASMs due to LPD (66.7%) and sED (44%) on cEEG. At hospital discharge, most respondents (85%) continue ASM without dose change. The recommended duration of outpatient ASM use is as follows: 1–3 months (36%), 3–6 months (30%), 6–12 months (13%), >12 months (11%). Nearly one‐third of respondents utilized ancillary testing before outpatient ASM taper, most commonly (79%) a <2 h EEG. Approximately half of respondents had driving restrictions recommended for 6 months after discharge.SignificanceASM use for secondary prophylaxis after convulsive and electrographic ASyS is a universal practice and is continued upon discharge. Outpatient care, particularly the ASM duration, varies significantly. Wide practice heterogeneity in managing acute EAs reflects uncertainty about their significance and management. These results highlight the need for a structured outpatient follow‐up and optimized care pathway for patients with ASyS.

Funder

American Epilepsy Society

Publisher

Wiley

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