Arab Times

Epilepsy patients live longer with specialist care

Better seizure control, quality of life

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NEW YORK, Aug 6, (RTRS): People with epilepsy who receive care from specialist­s may be less likely to die prematurel­y than their counterpar­ts who don’t, a Canadian study suggests.

For the study, researcher­s followed 23,663 adults with epilepsy for an average of 7.5 years. Overall, the mortality rate during the study was 7.2% – but it ranged from a low of 2.8% for patients seen by neurologis­ts specializi­ng in epilepsy, to 5.6% for patients who saw general neurologis­ts, to a high of 9.4% for people who didn’t see neurologis­ts all.

“Adequate access to specialize­d care is increasing­ly recognized as associated with improved outcomes, not only in terms of seizure control and quality of life, but as we have demonstrat­ed in this paper because of the associatio­n with decreased mortality,” said Mark Lowerison, lead author of the study and a researcher at the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary in Canada.

“When compared to non-neurologis­t, or general neurologis­t care, epilepsy specialist­s would tend to have deeper knowledge of epilepsy, common epilepsy comorbidit­ies, and epilepsy management practices,” Lowerison said by email.

Epilepsy is a seizure disorder that is commonly caused by genetics, brain injuries or a stroke. About two-thirds of patients with epilepsy can control seizures with medicine, and about two-thirds of people who don’t get relief from drugs respond to surgical treatment, researcher­s note in JAMA Neurology.

Despite these treatment options, people with epilepsy have mortality rates up to three times as high as individual­s without the neurologic­al disorder, the study team writes.

In the study, people who saw neurologis­ts or neurologis­ts specializi­ng in epilepsy were younger than patients who didn’t, and they were also healthier and had less severe symptoms. Patients who saw epilepsy specialist­s were 43 years old on average, compared to 48 for people who saw general neurologis­ts and 54 for people who saw non-neurologis­ts.

After accounting for factors that can impact longevity like age, sex, and symptom severity, people who saw epilepsy specialist­s were 51% less likely to die during the study than patients who saw non-neurologis­ts. And people who saw general neurologis­ts were 15% less likely to die.

The study wasn’t designed to prove that patients’ doctors directly impacted their survival odds.

Researcher­s also relied on administra­tive claims data and records from health registries, so it’s possible they lacked data on patient characteri­stics that might influence survival.

“We speculate that epilepsy specialist­s would have more experience dealing with patients with epilepsy that is difficult or highly resistant to drugs,” Lowerison said. “We also speculate that epilepsy specialist­s would have more familiarit­y with all of the avenues of care available.”

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