Infantile Spasms: Outcome in Clinical Studies.

Pediatr Neurol

Children's Hospital, University of Eastern Finland and Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio, Finland. Electronic address:

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Children with infantile spasms generally face poor outcomes, with factors including treatment response, neurological development, and potential progression to other types of epilepsy being key measures of success.
  • Current first-line treatments like adrenocorticotropic hormone and vigabatrin, particularly for patients with tuberous sclerosis, show varying effectiveness, with combination therapy potentially yielding better results than single therapies.
  • Long-term studies reveal that while only a fraction of patients achieve favorable cognitive outcomes and seizure freedom, early recognition and treatment of spasms and their complications could improve prognosis significantly.

Article Abstract

Children with infantile spasms are likely to have a poor outcome. Outcome measures for infantile spasms include primary response to treatment, relapse of spasms, neurological development, death, and progression to another type of epilepsy (Consensus Statements of the WEST Delphi Group 2004). This review is based mainly on prospective studies and emphasizes data about the current first-line drugs, adrenocorticotropic hormone, vigabatrin, and prednisolone, taking into account the proportion of patients with known and unknown etiology, which has a very strong effect on seizure outcome. In most studies, hormonal treatment (adrenocorticotropic hormone or prednisolone) is the optimal monotherapy, except for patients with tuberous sclerosis complex, in whom vigabatrin appears superior. Combination therapy (hormones plus vigabatrin) may well be more effective than either agent alone. The underlying etiology is the most important prognostic factor. In studies with a long follow-up (up to 50 years), a favorable cognitive outcome has been observed in approximately one quarter of patients and complete seizure freedom in one-third. Autism is relatively frequent, and premature mortality is high throughout life. Modifiable prognostic factors include early recognition of the spasms with prompt treatment, short duration of hypsarrhythmia, prompt treatment of relapses of spasms and multifocal epileptic discharges, and early treatment of adverse effects. It is hoped that eventually advanced genetics and molecular data will allow an understanding of the pathogenetic mechanisms of many specific etiologies to allow disease-specific treatment such as is emerging for tuberous sclerosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2020.01.015DOI Listing

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