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A qualitative awake EEG score for the diagnosis of continuous spike and waves during sleep (CSWS) syndrome in self-limited focal epilepsy (SFE): A case-control study.

Authors :
UCL - (SLuc) Service de neurologie pédiatrique
Aeby, Alec
Santalucia, Roberto
Van Hecke, Audrey
Nebbioso, Andrea
Vermeiren, Justine
Deconinck, Nicolas
De Tiège, Xavier
Van Bogaert, Patrick
UCL - (SLuc) Service de neurologie pédiatrique
Aeby, Alec
Santalucia, Roberto
Van Hecke, Audrey
Nebbioso, Andrea
Vermeiren, Justine
Deconinck, Nicolas
De Tiège, Xavier
Van Bogaert, Patrick
Source :
Seizure, Vol. 84, no. 1, p. 34-39 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine whether awake EEG criteria can differentiate epileptic encephalopathy with continuous spike and waves during sleep (EE-CSWS) at the time of cognitive regression from typical, self-limited focal epilepsy (SFE). METHODS: This retrospective case-control study was based on the analysis of awake EEGs and included 15 patients with EE-CSWS and 15 age-matched and sex-matched patients with typical SFE. The EEGs were anonymised and scored by four independent readers. The following qualitative and quantitative EEG indices were analysed: slow-wave index (SLWI), spike-wave index (SWI), spike-wave frequency (SWF), long spike-wave clusters (CLSW) and EEG score (between grades 0 and 4). Sensitivity and specificity were assessed using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and their reproducibility with a kappa test. RESULTS: Based on a highly sensitive cut-off, EE-CSWS patients were 8.4 times more likely than those with SFE to have an SLWI > 6%, 15 times more likely to have an SWI > 10 % and six times more likely to have a CLSW of ≥ 1 s. There was substantial agreement between readers (with kappa values of 0.64, 0.69 and 0.67). EE-CSWS patients were 13 times more likely to have an SWF of > 11 % and 149 times more likely to have an EEG score of ≥ 3 than typical SFE patients. Agreement about these ratings was almost perfect (kappa 0.91 and 0.86). CONCLUSION: An EEG score of ≥ 3 on a 20-min awake EEG differentiates typical SFE from EE-CSWS at the time of cognitive regression, with good reliability across readers with different levels of expertise.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Seizure, Vol. 84, no. 1, p. 34-39 (2021)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372961429
Document Type :
Electronic Resource