Retrospective study on neonatal seizures in a tertiary center of northern Italy after ILAE classification: Incidence, seizure type, EEG and etiology

•In our study increased contribution of genetic factors and decreased contribution of HIE on neonatal seizures (NS) emerged.•Electrographic seizures are more common in acute provoked seizures, preterm age, and HIE.•Vascular etiology is associated with clonic seizures, while non-structural genetic ep...

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Published inEpilepsy & behavior Vol. 159; p. 109971
Main Authors Dilena, Robertino, Molisso, Maria T., De Carli, Agnese, Mauri, Eleonora, Circiello, Alberta, Di Benedetto, Alessia, Pisoni, Silvia, Bassi, Laura, Bana, Cristina, Cappellari, Alberto M., Consonni, Dario, Mastrangelo, Massimo, Granata, Tiziana, La Briola, Francesca, Peruzzi, Cinzia, Raviglione, Federico, Striano, Pasquale, Barbieri, Sergio, Mosca, Fabio, Fumagalli, Monica
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.10.2024
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Summary:•In our study increased contribution of genetic factors and decreased contribution of HIE on neonatal seizures (NS) emerged.•Electrographic seizures are more common in acute provoked seizures, preterm age, and HIE.•Vascular etiology is associated with clonic seizures, while non-structural genetic epilepsy with sequential seizures.•Background EEG is abnormal in HIE, while in genetic epilepsy is more abnormal in DEE than in SeLNE.•Ictal EEG is more frequently multifocal in electrographic seizures, focal in stroke and bilateral in genetic epilepsy. We aimed to evaluate epidemiology, seizure type, EEG, and etiology of neonatal seizures (NS) in a tertiary neonatal intensive care unit. Data on infants with a neurophysiological confirmation of NS were collected between 2009 and 2022. Seizure types and epileptic syndromes were classified by the ILAE classification and EEG by the Italian Neonatal Seizure Collaborative Network (INNESCO) score. Out of 91,253 neonates, 145 presented with NS; 69.7 % were born at term and 30.3 % were preterm infants. The incidence of NS in neonates born at our center was 1.2 per 1,000 live newborns (96/80697 neonates) while in the entire neonatal population admitted to our center it was 1.6 per 1,000 live births, increasing with lower preterm age. Compared to previous studies, we found a lower proportion of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) (23.4 %) and a higher rate of genetic contribution (26.2 %). The infection rate was higher in preterm (31.8 %) than in full term (9.9 %) infants. Electrographic seizures were associated with acute provoked seizures (35.9 %), preterm age (52.3 %), and HIE (52.9 %). Vascular etiology was associated with focal clonic seizures (56.8 %). Non-structural neonatal genetic epilepsy was associated with sequential seizures (68.2 %), particularly KCNQ2 and SCN2A epilepsy. Background EEG was abnormal in all HIE, infections (85.7 %) and metabolic NS (83.3 %). In genetic epilepsy, background EEG depended on the epileptic syndrome: normal in 80 % of self-limited neonatal epilepsy and abnormal in 77.8 % of developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Electroclinical seizures were associated with focal onset, while electrographic seizures correlated with a multifocal onset. A low incidence of HIE and a high incidence of genetic etiology were observed in our cohort of NS. Seizure type and EEG features are fundamental to address etiology.
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ISSN:1525-5050
1525-5069
1525-5069
DOI:10.1016/j.yebeh.2024.109971