Adult-onset epilepsy and risk of traumatic brain injury: a nationwide cohort study




Posti Jussi P, Ruuskanen Jori O, Kytö Ville

PublisherBMJ PUBLISHING GROUP

2022

Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY

J NEUROL NEUROSUR PS

3

0022-3050

1468-330X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp-2022-330150

http://dx.doi.org/10.1136%2Fjnnp-2022-330150

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/178214817



Background

A knowledge gap exists regarding the risk of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in patients with epilepsy.

Methods

Patients with adult-onset epilepsy during 2005-2018 in Finland were studied using retrospective longitudinal national registry-linkage design. Patients with epilepsy (n=35686; 51% men; mean age 56.6 years) were 1:1 matched to non-epileptic controls by age, sex, comorbidity burden and cohort entry year. The primary outcome was TBI leading to admission or death, secondary outcomes were TBI admission, fatal TBI, acute neurosurgical operations (ANOs) for TBI and TBI recurrence.

Results

The cumulative rate of the primary endpoint was 1.2% at 1 year, 5.6% at 10 years and 7.3% at 14 years in the epilepsy group versus 2.9% at 14 years in the matched controls (HR=3.77; p<0.0001). Epilepsy was associated with increased risk of TBI admission (6.9% vs 2.7%; HR=3.96; p<0.0001),ANOs (1.3% vs 0.4%; HR=7.00; p<0.0001) and fatal TBI (1.3% vs 0.5%; HR=3.82; p<0.0001), during follow-up. Competing risk analyses confirmed the association of epilepsy with all outcomes (p<0.0001). Epilepsy was associated with TBI recurrence during follow-up (HR 1.72; p=0.002).

Conclusion

Patients with adult-onset epilepsy have a significantly increased risk of severe and fatal TBI. The results underline the importance of TBI prevention in epilepsy.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 17:47