Cyclical underreporting of seizures in patient‐based seizure documentation

Abstract Objective Circadian and multidien cycles of seizure occurrence are increasingly discussed as to their biological underpinnings and in the context of seizure forecasting. This study analyzes if patient reported seizures provide valid data on such cyclical occurrence. Methods We retrospective...

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Published inAnnals of clinical and translational neurology Vol. 10; no. 10; pp. 1863 - 1872
Main Authors Schulze‐Bonhage, Andreas, Richardson, Mark P., Brandt, Armin, Zabler, Nicolas, Dümpelmann, Matthias, San Antonio‐Arce, Victoria
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bognor Regis John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.10.2023
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Wiley
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Summary:Abstract Objective Circadian and multidien cycles of seizure occurrence are increasingly discussed as to their biological underpinnings and in the context of seizure forecasting. This study analyzes if patient reported seizures provide valid data on such cyclical occurrence. Methods We retrospectively studied if circadian cycles derived from patient‐based reporting reflect the objective seizure documentation in 2003 patients undergoing in‐patient video‐EEG monitoring. Results Only 24.1% of more than 29000 seizures documented were accompanied by patient notifications. There was cyclical underreporting of seizures with a maximum during nighttime, leading to significant deviations in the circadian distribution of seizures. Significant cyclical deviations were found for focal epilepsies originating from both, frontal and temporal lobes, and for different seizure types (in particular, focal unaware and focal to bilateral tonic–clonic seizures). Interpretation Patient seizure diaries may reflect a cyclical reporting bias rather than the true circadian seizure distributions. Cyclical underreporting of seizures derived from patient‐based reports alone may lead to suboptimal treatment schemes, to an underestimation of seizure‐associated risks, and may pose problems for valid seizure forecasting. This finding strongly supports the use of objective measures to monitor cyclical distributions of seizures and for studies and treatment decisions based thereon.
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Correction added on 12 September 2023, after first online publication: The reference citation numbers were corrected throughout the article.
ISSN:2328-9503
2328-9503
DOI:10.1002/acn3.51880