Medicine (RMH) - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 11
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Rare Genetic Variation and Outcome of Surgery for Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
    Perucca, P ; Stanley, K ; Harris, N ; McIntosh, AM ; Asadi-Pooya, AA ; Mikati, MA ; Andrade, DM ; Dugan, P ; Depondt, C ; Choi, H ; Heinzen, EL ; Cavalleri, GL ; Buono, RJ ; Devinsky, O ; Sperling, MR ; Berkovic, SF ; Delanty, N ; Goldstein, DB ; O'Brien, TJ (WILEY, 2023-04)
    OBJECTIVE: Genetic factors have long been debated as a cause of failure of surgery for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE). We investigated whether rare genetic variation influences seizure outcomes of MTLE surgery. METHODS: We performed an international, multicenter, whole exome sequencing study of patients who underwent surgery for drug-resistant, unilateral MTLE with normal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or MRI evidence of hippocampal sclerosis and ≥2-year postsurgical follow-up. Patients with either sustained seizure freedom (favorable outcome) or ongoing uncontrolled seizures since surgery (unfavorable outcome) were included. Exomes of controls without epilepsy were also included. Gene set burden analyses were carried out to identify genes with significant enrichment of rare deleterious variants in patients compared to controls. RESULTS: Nine centers from 3 continents contributed 206 patients operated for drug-resistant unilateral MTLE, of whom 196 (149 with favorable outcome and 47 with unfavorable outcome) were included after stringent quality control. Compared to 8,718 controls, MTLE cases carried a higher burden of ultrarare missense variants in constrained genes that are intolerant to loss-of-function (LoF) variants (odds ratio [OR] = 2.6, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.9-3.5, p = 1.3E-09) and in genes encoding voltage-gated cation channels (OR = 2.4, 95% CI = 1.4-3.8, p = 2.7E-04). Proportions of subjects with such variants were comparable between patients with favorable outcome and those with unfavorable outcome, with no significant between-group differences. INTERPRETATION: Rare variation contributes to the genetic architecture of MTLE, but does not appear to have a major role in failure of MTLE surgery. These findings can be incorporated into presurgical decision-making and counseling. ANN NEUROL 2022.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Familial Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy: Clinical Spectrum and Genetic Evidence for a Polygenic Architecture
    Harris, RV ; Oliver, KL ; Perucca, P ; Striano, P ; Labate, A ; Riva, A ; Grinton, BE ; Reid, J ; Hutton, J ; Todaro, M ; O'Brien, TJ ; Kwan, P ; Sadleir, LG ; Mullen, SA ; Dazzo, E ; Crompton, DE ; Scheffer, IE ; Bahlo, M ; Nobile, C ; Gambardella, A ; Berkovic, SF (WILEY, 2023-11)
    OBJECTIVE: Familial mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (FMTLE) is an important focal epilepsy syndrome; its molecular genetic basis is unknown. Clinical descriptions of FMTLE vary between a mild syndrome with prominent déjà vu to a more severe phenotype with febrile seizures and hippocampal sclerosis. We aimed to refine the phenotype of FMTLE by analyzing a large cohort of patients and asked whether common risk variants for focal epilepsy and/or febrile seizures, measured by polygenic risk scores (PRS), are enriched in individuals with FMTLE. METHODS: We studied 134 families with ≥ 2 first or second-degree relatives with temporal lobe epilepsy, with clear mesial ictal semiology required in at least one individual. PRS were calculated for 227 FMTLE cases, 124 unaffected relatives, and 16,077 population controls. RESULTS: The age of patients with FMTLE onset ranged from 2.5 to 70 years (median = 18, interquartile range = 13-28 years). The most common focal seizure symptom was déjà vu (62% of cases), followed by epigastric rising sensation (34%), and fear or anxiety (22%). The clinical spectrum included rare cases with drug-resistance and/or hippocampal sclerosis. FMTLE cases had a higher mean focal epilepsy PRS than population controls (odds ratio = 1.24, 95% confidence interval = 1.06, 1.46, p = 0.007); in contrast, no enrichment for the febrile seizure PRS was observed. INTERPRETATION: FMTLE is a generally mild drug-responsive syndrome with déjà vu being the commonest symptom. In contrast to dominant monogenic focal epilepsy syndromes, our molecular data support a polygenic basis for FMTLE. Furthermore, the PRS data suggest that sub-genome-wide significant focal epilepsy genome-wide association study single nucleotide polymorphisms are important risk variants for FMTLE. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:825-835.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Diagnostic delay in focal epilepsy: Association with brain pathology and age
    Yang, M ; Tan, KM ; Carney, P ; Kwan, P ; O'Brien, TJ ; Berkovic, SF ; Perucca, P ; McIntosh, AM (W B SAUNDERS CO LTD, 2022-03)
    PURPOSE: Between 16-77% of patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy report seizures before diagnosis but little is known about the risk factors for diagnostic delay. Here, we examined the association between prior seizures and neuroimaging findings in newly diagnosed focal epilepsy. METHODS: Adults diagnosed with focal epilepsy at First Seizure Clinics (FSC) at the Royal Melbourne Hospital or Austin Health, Melbourne, Australia, between 2000 and 2010 were included. Medical records were audited for seizure history accrued from the detailed FSC interview. Potentially epileptogenic brain abnormality type, location and extent was determined from neuroimaging. Statistical analysis comprised multivariate logistic regression. RESULTS: Of 735 patients, 44% reported seizure/s before the index seizure. Among the 260 individuals with a potentially epileptogenic brain imaging abnormality, 34% reported prior seizures. Of 475 individuals with no abnormality, 50% reported prior seizures (p < 0.001). Patients with post-stroke changes had lower odds of prior seizures (n = 24/95, OR 0.5, p = 0.005) compared to patients without abnormalities, as did patients with high-grade tumors (n = 1/10, OR 0.1, p = 0.04). Abnormality location or extent was not associated with seizures. Prior seizures were inversely associated with age, patients aged >50 years had lower odds compared to those 18-30 years (OR 0.5, p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: A history of prior seizures is less common in patients with newly diagnosed focal epilepsy associated with antecedent stroke or high-grade tumor than in those without a lesion, and is also less common in older individuals. These findings may be related to age, biological mechanisms or aspects of diagnosis and assessment of these events.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) with lamotrigine and other sodium channel-modulating antiseizure medications
    Nightscales, R ; Barnard, S ; Laze, J ; Chen, Z ; Tao, G ; Auvrez, C ; Sivathamboo, S ; Cook, MJ ; Kwan, P ; Friedman, D ; Berkovic, SF ; D'Souza, W ; Perucca, P ; Devinsky, O ; O'Brien, TJ (WILEY, 2023-06)
    OBJECTIVE: In vitro data prompted U.S Food and Drug Administration warnings that lamotrigine, a common sodium channel modulating anti-seizure medication (NaM-ASM), could increase the risk of sudden death in patients with structural or ischaemic cardiac disease, however, its implications for Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP) are unclear. METHODS: This retrospective, nested case-control study identified 101 sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) cases and 199 living epilepsy controls from Epilepsy Monitoring Units (EMUs) in Australia and the USA. Differences in proportions of lamotrigine and NaM-ASM use were compared between cases and controls at the time of admission, and survival analyses from the time of admission up to 16 years were conducted. Multivariable logistic regression and survival analyses compared each ASM subgroup adjusting for SUDEP risk factors. RESULTS: Proportions of cases and controls prescribed lamotrigine (P = 0.166), one NaM-ASM (P = 0.80), or ≥2NaM-ASMs (P = 0.447) at EMU admission were not significantly different. Patients taking lamotrigine (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] = 0.56; P = 0.054), one NaM-ASM (aHR = 0.8; P = 0.588) or ≥2 NaM-ASMs (aHR = 0.49; P = 0.139) at EMU admission were not at increased SUDEP risk up to 16 years following admission. Active tonic-clonic seizures at EMU admission associated with >2-fold SUDEP risk, irrespective of lamotrigine (aHR = 2.24; P = 0.031) or NaM-ASM use (aHR = 2.25; P = 0.029). Sensitivity analyses accounting for incomplete ASM data at follow-up suggest undetected changes to ASM use are unlikely to alter our results. SIGNIFICANCE: This study provides additional evidence that lamotrigine and other NaM-ASMs are unlikely to be associated with an increased long-term risk of SUDEP, up to 16 years post-EMU admission.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Cerebrospinal fluid neurofilament light chain differentiates primary psychiatric disorders from rapidly progressive, Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal disorders in clinical settings
    Eratne, D ; Loi, SM ; Qiao-Xin, L ; Stehmann, C ; Malpas, CB ; Santillo, A ; Janelidze, S ; Cadwallader, C ; Walia, N ; Ney, B ; Lewis, V ; Senesi, M ; Fowler, C ; McGlade, A ; Varghese, S ; Ravanfar, P ; Kelso, W ; Farrand, S ; Keem, M ; Kang, M ; Goh, AMY ; Dhiman, K ; Gupta, V ; Watson, R ; Yassi, N ; Kaylor-Hughes, C ; Kanaan, R ; Perucca, P ; Dobson, H ; Vivash, L ; Ali, R ; O'Brien, TJ ; Hansson, O ; Zetterberg, H ; Blennow, K ; Walterfang, M ; Masters, CL ; Berkovic, SF ; Collins, S ; Velakoulis, D (WILEY, 2022-11)
    INTRODUCTION: Many patients with cognitive and neuropsychiatric symptoms face diagnostic delay and misdiagnosis. We investigated whether cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neurofilament light (NfL) and total-tau (t-tau) could assist in the clinical scenario of differentiating neurodegenerative (ND) from psychiatric disorders (PSY), and rapidly progressive disorders. METHODS: Biomarkers were examined in patients from specialist services (ND and PSY) and a national Creutzfeldt-Jakob registry (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease [CJD] and rapidly progressive dementias/atypically rapid variants of common ND, RapidND). RESULTS: A total of 498 participants were included: 197 ND, 67 PSY, 161 CJD, 48 RapidND, and 20 controls. NfL was elevated in ND compared to PSY and controls, with highest levels in CJD and RapidND. NfL distinguished ND from PSY with 95%/78% positive/negative predictive value, 92%/87% sensitivity/specificity, 91% accuracy. NfL outperformed t-tau in most real-life clinical diagnostic dilemma scenarios, except distinguishing CJD from RapidND. DISCUSSION: We demonstrated strong generalizable evidence for the diagnostic utility of CSF NfL in differentiating ND from psychiatric disorders, with high accuracy.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Climate change and epilepsy: Insights from clinical and basic science studies
    Gulcebi, M ; Bartolini, E ; Lee, O ; Lisgaras, CP ; Onat, F ; Mifsud, J ; Striano, P ; Vezzani, A ; Hildebrand, MS ; Jimenez-Jimenez, D ; Junck, L ; Lewis-Smith, D ; Scheffer, IE ; Thijs, RD ; Zuberi, SM ; Blenkinsop, S ; Fowler, HJ ; Foley, A ; Sisodiya, SM ; Balestrini, S ; Berkovic, S ; Cavalleri, G ; Correa, DJ ; Custodio, HM ; Galovic, M ; Guerrini, R ; Henshall, D ; Howard, O ; Hughes, K ; Katsarou, A ; Koeleman, BPC ; Krause, R ; Lowenstein, D ; Mandelenaki, D ; Marini, C ; O'Brien, TJ ; Pace, A ; De Palma, L ; Perucca, P ; Pitkanen, A ; Quinn, F ; Selmer, KK ; Steward, CA ; Swanborough, N ; Thijs, R ; Tittensor, P ; Trivisano, M ; Weckhuysen, S ; Zara, F (ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE, 2021-03)
    Climate change is with us. As professionals who place value on evidence-based practice, climate change is something we cannot ignore. The current pandemic of the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, has demonstrated how global crises can arise suddenly and have a significant impact on public health. Global warming, a chronic process punctuated by acute episodes of extreme weather events, is an insidious global health crisis needing at least as much attention. Many neurological diseases are complex chronic conditions influenced at many levels by changes in the environment. This review aimed to collate and evaluate reports from clinical and basic science about the relationship between climate change and epilepsy. The keywords climate change, seasonal variation, temperature, humidity, thermoregulation, biorhythm, gene, circadian rhythm, heat, and weather were used to search the published evidence. A number of climatic variables are associated with increased seizure frequency in people with epilepsy. Climate change-induced increase in seizure precipitants such as fevers, stress, and sleep deprivation (e.g. as a result of more frequent extreme weather events) or vector-borne infections may trigger or exacerbate seizures, lead to deterioration of seizure control, and affect neurological, cerebrovascular, or cardiovascular comorbidities and risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy. Risks are likely to be modified by many factors, ranging from individual genetic variation and temperature-dependent channel function, to housing quality and global supply chains. According to the results of the limited number of experimental studies with animal models of seizures or epilepsy, different seizure types appear to have distinct susceptibility to seasonal influences. Increased body temperature, whether in the context of fever or not, has a critical role in seizure threshold and seizure-related brain damage. Links between climate change and epilepsy are likely to be multifactorial, complex, and often indirect, which makes predictions difficult. We need more data on possible climate-driven altered risks for seizures, epilepsy, and epileptogenesis, to identify underlying mechanisms at systems, cellular, and molecular levels for better understanding of the impact of climate change on epilepsy. Further focussed data would help us to develop evidence for mitigation methods to do more to protect people with epilepsy from the effects of climate change.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Interictal EEG and ECG for SUDEP Risk Assessment: A Retrospective Multicenter Cohort Study
    Chen, ZS ; Hsieh, A ; Sun, G ; Bergey, GK ; Berkovic, SF ; Perucca, P ; D'Souza, W ; Elder, CJ ; Farooque, P ; Johnson, EL ; Barnard, S ; Nightscales, R ; Kwan, P ; Moseley, B ; O'Brien, TJ ; Sivathamboo, S ; Laze, J ; Friedman, D ; Devinsky, O (FRONTIERS MEDIA SA, 2022-03-18)
    OBJECTIVE: Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is the leading cause of epilepsy-related mortality. Although lots of effort has been made in identifying clinical risk factors for SUDEP in the literature, there are few validated methods to predict individual SUDEP risk. Prolonged postictal EEG suppression (PGES) is a potential SUDEP biomarker, but its occurrence is infrequent and requires epilepsy monitoring unit admission. We use machine learning methods to examine SUDEP risk using interictal EEG and ECG recordings from SUDEP cases and matched living epilepsy controls. METHODS: This multicenter, retrospective, cohort study examined interictal EEG and ECG recordings from 30 SUDEP cases and 58 age-matched living epilepsy patient controls. We trained machine learning models with interictal EEG and ECG features to predict the retrospective SUDEP risk for each patient. We assessed cross-validated classification accuracy and the area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUC) curve. RESULTS: The logistic regression (LR) classifier produced the overall best performance, outperforming the support vector machine (SVM), random forest (RF), and convolutional neural network (CNN). Among the 30 patients with SUDEP [14 females; mean age (SD), 31 (8.47) years] and 58 living epilepsy controls [26 females (43%); mean age (SD) 31 (8.5) years], the LR model achieved the median AUC of 0.77 [interquartile range (IQR), 0.73-0.80] in five-fold cross-validation using interictal alpha and low gamma power ratio of the EEG and heart rate variability (HRV) features extracted from the ECG. The LR model achieved the mean AUC of 0.79 in leave-one-center-out prediction. CONCLUSIONS: Our results support that machine learning-driven models may quantify SUDEP risk for epilepsy patients, future refinements in our model may help predict individualized SUDEP risk and help clinicians correlate predictive scores with the clinical data. Low-cost and noninvasive interictal biomarkers of SUDEP risk may help clinicians to identify high-risk patients and initiate preventive strategies.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Association Between Psychiatric Comorbidities and Mortality in Epilepsy
    Tao, G ; Auvrez, C ; Nightscales, R ; Barnard, S ; McCartney, L ; Malpas, CB ; Perucca, P ; Chen, Z ; Adams, S ; McIntosh, A ; Ignatiadis, S ; O'Brien, P ; Cook, MJ ; Kwan, P ; Berkovic, SF ; D'Souza, W ; Velakoulis, D ; O'Brien, TJ (LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS, 2021-10)
    OBJECTIVE: To explore the impact of psychiatric comorbidities on all-cause mortality in adults with epilepsy from a cohort of patients admitted for video-EEG monitoring (VEM) over 2 decades. METHODS: A retrospective medical record audit was conducted on 2,709 adults admitted for VEM and diagnosed with epilepsy at 3 Victorian comprehensive epilepsy programs from 1995 to 2015. A total of 1,805 patients were identified in whom the record of a clinical evaluation by a neuropsychiatrist was available, excluding 27 patients who died of a malignant brain tumor known at the time of VEM admission. Epilepsy and lifetime psychiatric diagnoses were determined from consensus opinion of epileptologists and neuropsychiatrists involved in the care of each patient. Mortality and cause of death were determined by linkage to the Australian National Death Index and National Coronial Information System. RESULTS: Compared with the general population, mortality was higher in people with epilepsy (PWE) with a psychiatric illness (standardized mortality ratio [SMR] 3.6) and without a psychiatric illness (SMR 2.5). PWE with a psychiatric illness had greater mortality compared with PWE without (hazard ratio 1.41, 95% confidence interval 1.02-1.97) after adjusting for age and sex. No single psychiatric disorder by itself conferred increased mortality in PWE. The distribution of causes of death remained similar between PWE with psychiatric comorbidities and those without. CONCLUSION: The presence of comorbid psychiatric disorders in adults with epilepsy is associated with increased mortality, highlighting the importance of identifying and treating psychiatric comorbidities in these patients.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Antiepileptic Drug Teratogenicity and De Novo Genetic Variation Load
    Perucca, P ; Anderson, A ; Jazayeri, D ; Hitchcock, A ; Graham, J ; Todaro, M ; Tomson, T ; Battino, D ; Perucca, E ; Ferri, MM ; Rochtus, A ; Lagae, L ; Canevini, MP ; Zambrelli, E ; Campbell, E ; Koeleman, BPC ; Scheffer, IE ; Berkovic, SF ; Kwan, P ; Sisodiya, SM ; Goldstein, DB ; Petrovski, S ; Craig, J ; Vajda, FJE ; O'Brien, TJ (WILEY, 2020-06)
    OBJECTIVE: The mechanisms by which antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) cause birth defects (BDs) are unknown. Data suggest that AED-induced BDs may result from a genome-wide increase of de novo variants in the embryo, a mechanism that we investigated. METHODS: Whole exome sequencing data from child-parent trios were interrogated for de novo single-nucleotide variants/indels (dnSNVs/indels) and de novo copy number variants (dnCNVs). Generalized linear models were applied to assess de novo variant burdens in children exposed prenatally to AEDs (AED-exposed children) versus children without BDs not exposed prenatally to AEDs (AED-unexposed unaffected children), and AED-exposed children with BDs versus those without BDs, adjusting for confounders. Fisher exact test was used to compare categorical data. RESULTS: Sixty-seven child-parent trios were included: 10 with AED-exposed children with BDs, 46 with AED-exposed unaffected children, and 11 with AED-unexposed unaffected children. The dnSNV/indel burden did not differ between AED-exposed children and AED-unexposed unaffected children (median dnSNV/indel number/child [range] = 3 [0-7] vs 3 [1-5], p = 0.50). Among AED-exposed children, there were no significant differences between those with BDs and those unaffected. Likely deleterious dnSNVs/indels were detected in 9 of 67 (13%) children, none of whom had BDs. The proportion of cases harboring likely deleterious dnSNVs/indels did not differ significantly between AED-unexposed and AED-exposed children. The dnCNV burden was not associated with AED exposure or birth outcome. INTERPRETATION: Our study indicates that prenatal AED exposure does not increase the burden of de novo variants, and that this mechanism is not a major contributor to AED-induced BDs. These results can be incorporated in routine patient counseling. ANN NEUROL 2020;87:897-906.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Newly diagnosed seizures assessed at two established first seizure clinics: Clinic characteristics, investigations, and findings over 11 years
    McIntosh, AM ; Tan, KM ; Hakami, TM ; Newton, MR ; Carney, PW ; Yang, M ; Saya, S ; Marco, DJT ; Perucca, P ; Kwan, P ; O'Brien, TJ ; Berkovic, SF (WILEY, 2021-03)
    OBJECTIVE: 'First seizure' clinics (FSCs) aim to achieve early expert assessment for individuals with possible new-onset epilepsy. These clinics also have substantial potential for research into epilepsy evolution, outcomes, and costs. However, a paucity of FSCs details has implications for interpretation and utilization of this research. METHODS: We reviewed investigation findings over 11 years (2000-2010) from two established independent FSCs at Austin Health (AH) and Royal Melbourne Hospital (RMH), Australia. These adult clinics are in major public hospitals and operate with similar levels of expertise. Organizational differences include screening and dedicated administration at AH. Included were N = 1555 patients diagnosed with new-onset unprovoked seizures/epilepsy (AH n = 901, RMH n = 654). Protocol-driven interviews and investigations had been recorded prospectively and were extracted from medical records for study. RESULTS: Median patient age was 37 (IQR 26-52, range 18-94) years (AH 34 vs RMH 42 years; P < .001). Eighty-six percent of patients attended FSC within three weeks postindex seizure (median AH 12 vs RMH 25 days; P < .01). By their first appointment, 42% had experienced ≥2 seizures. An EEG was obtained within three weeks postindex seizure in 73% of patients, demonstrating epileptiform discharges in 25% (AH 33% vs RMH 15%). Seventy-six percent of patients had an MRI within 6 weeks. Of those with imaging (n = 1500), 19% had potentially epileptogenic abnormalities (RMH 28% vs AH 12%; P < .01). At both sites, changes due to previous stroke/hemorrhage were the commonest lesions, followed by traumatic brain injury. ≥WHO level 1 brain tumors diagnosed at presentation comprised a very small proportion (<1%) at each clinic. At both sites, epilepsy type could be determined in 60% of patients; RMH had more focal and AH more generalized epilepsy diagnoses. SIGNIFICANCE: Differences between the clinics' administrative and screening practices may contribute to differences in investigation findings. Insight into these differences will facilitate interpretation and utilization, and planning of future research.