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Maintenance of response to ketogenic diet therapy for drug-resistant epilepsy post diet discontinuation: A multi-centre case note review.

Authors :
Schoeler, Natasha E
Ridout, Deborah
Neal, Elizabeth G
Becirovic, Marisa
Whiteley, Victoria J
Meskell, Rachel
Lightfoot, Kathryn
Mills, Nicole
Ives, Tammy
Bara, Vanessa
Cameron, Emma
Thomas, Phillipa
Wilford, Ellen
Fox, Rachel
Fabe, Jennifer
Leong, Jia Yi
Tan-Smith, Charlene
Source :
Seizure; Oct2024, Vol. 121, p78-84, 7p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Two-thirds of children who responded to KDT maintained response post-diet. • One third of children maintained response without further treatments added. • Children who were seizure-free on diet were more likely to maintain response. There is limited research on the proportion of individuals with epilepsy who maintain response to ketogenic diet therapy (KDT) after discontinuing treatment. We aimed to determine the proportion of individuals who did / did not maintain response post KDT and explore factors that may influence the likelihood of maintaining response. Retrospective data were collected from 97 individuals from 9 KDT centres. Individuals had achieved ≥50 % seizure reduction on KDT for at least 12 months, with seizure frequency data available at 3 months+ post diet. Outcome 1 was: recurrence of seizures or increase in seizure frequency post diet; outcome 2: recurrence of seizures, increase in seizure frequency or an additional anti-seizure treatment started post diet. 61/97 (62.9 %) individuals maintained response at latest follow-up (mean 2.5[2.0] years since stopping KDT). Approximately one third maintained response without further anti-seizure treatments. One quarter of individuals had an increase in frequency or recurrence of seizures within 6 months (95 %CI 4, 12) for outcome 1 and within 3 months (3, 6) for outcome 2. Individuals who did not achieve seizure freedom on diet were significantly more likely to have an increase in seizures or to require additional anti-seizure treatments post diet compared to those who were seizure-free on diet (hazard ratio 4.02, 95 %CI (1.46, 11.16) p < 0.01). Our findings should help guide clinical teams with the information they provide patients and their families regarding likelihood of long-term seizure response to KDT. Realistic costings for KDT services may need to be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10591311
Volume :
121
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Seizure
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180115643
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.seizure.2024.08.005