Population‐based study of rare epilepsy incidence in a US urban population

Author:

Barbour Kristen1ORCID,Tian Niu2ORCID,Yozawitz Elissa G.3ORCID,Wolf Steven45ORCID,McGoldrick Patricia E.45,Sands Tristan T.6ORCID,Nelson Aaron7,Basma Natasha8,Grinspan Zachary M.8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of California, San Diego San Diego California USA

2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Atlanta Georgia USA

3. Montefiore Medical Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx New York USA

4. Boston Children's Health Physicians Hawthorne New York USA

5. New York Medical College Valhalla New York USA

6. Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York New York USA

7. New York University Langone Medical Center New York New York USA

8. Weill Cornell Medicine New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThis study was undertaken to estimate incidence of rare epilepsies and compare with literature.MethodsWe used electronic health record text search to identify children with 28 rare epilepsies in New York City (2010–2014). We estimated cumulative incidence and compared with literature.ResultsEight of 28 rare epilepsies had five or more prior estimates, and our measurements were within the published range for all. The most common were infantile epileptic spasms syndrome (1 in 2920 live births), Lennox–Gastaut syndrome (1 in 9690), and seizures associated with tuberous sclerosis complex (1 in 14 300). Fifteen of 28 had fewer than five prior estimates, and of these, we provided additional estimates for early infantile developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (1 in 32 700), epilepsy with myoclonic–atonic seizures (1 in 34 100), Sturge–Weber syndrome plus seizures/epilepsy (1 in 40 900), epilepsy in infancy with migrating focal seizures (1 in 54 500), Aicardi syndrome plus seizures/epilepsy (1 in 71 600), hypothalamic hamartoma with seizures (1 in 225 000), and Rasmussen syndrome (1 in 450 000). Five of 28 rare epilepsies had no prior estimates, and of these, we provided a new estimate for developmental/epileptic encephalopathy with spike‐and‐wave activation in sleep and/or continuous spikes and waves during sleep (1 in 34 100). Data were limited for the remaining 12 rare epilepsies, which were all genetic epilepsies, including PCDH19, CDKL5, Alpers disease, SCN8A, KCNQ2, SCN2A, GLUT1 deficiency, Phelan‐McDermid syndrome, myoclonic epilepsy with ragged‐red fibers, dup15q syndrome, ring chromosome 14, and ring chromosome 20.SignificanceWe estimated the incidence of rare epilepsies using population‐based electronic health record data and literature review. More research is needed to better estimate the incidence of genetic epilepsies with nonspecific clinical features. Electronic health records may be a valuable data source for studying rare epilepsies and other rare diseases, particularly as genetic testing becomes more widely adopted.

Publisher

Wiley

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