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Cognitive decline over 7 years in aging patients with childhood-onset epilepsy: A population-based prospective follow-up study

Karrasch, Mira; Hermann, Bruce; Roos, Tove; Joutsa, Juho; Rinne, Juha O.; Parkkola, Riitta; Tiitta, Petri; Sillanpää, Matti

Cognitive decline over 7 years in aging patients with childhood-onset epilepsy: A population-based prospective follow-up study

Karrasch, Mira
Hermann, Bruce
Roos, Tove
Joutsa, Juho
Rinne, Juha O.
Parkkola, Riitta
Tiitta, Petri
Sillanpää, Matti
Katso/Avaa
JoutsaEtAl2025CognitiveDeclineOver7Years.pdf (673.1Kb)
Lataukset: 

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
doi:10.1017/S1355617725101021
URI
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-the-international-neuropsychological-society/article/cognitive-decline-over-7-years-in-aging-patients-with-childhoodonset-epilepsy-a-populationbased-prospective-followup-study/2BA02F4BE6BA37C211B94CF514C6D921
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe202601215721
Tiivistelmä

Objective: The cognitive trajectory of aging individuals with childhood-onset epilepsy is poorly understood. Our aim was to examine cognitive change over a 7-year period in aging individuals with epilepsy, originally recruited for prospective follow up in the early 1960's.

Method: 36 participants with childhood-onset epilepsy from a prospective population-based cohort and 39 controls participated in the 50-year and 57-year follow-up data collections. Eight participants had active epilepsy, 28 were in remission. Eleven neuropsychological tests were used to measure language/semantic function, episodic memory and learning, executive function, visuomotor function, and working memory. Regression-based standardized change scores were used to control for sources of error in test-retest assessments.

Results: Participants with epilepsy lacked a test-retest effect in language functions. A significant decline was found in participants with active epilepsy in episodic memory functions overall, and in those with remitted epilepsy in learning, immediate recall and set-shifting. The risk of clinically significant general cognitive decline was higher in participants with active epilepsy (OR 61.25, 95% CI 5.92-633.81, p = .0006). Among those with remitted epilepsy the risk was lower and non-significant (OR 2.19, 95% CI 0.58-8.23, p = .24).

Conclusions: Our results demonstrate poorer cognitive trajectories in participants with childhood-onset epilepsy compared to controls, particularly in those with active epilepsy. The risk of general cognitive decline was lower in participants with remitted epilepsy, but a decline in episodic memory functions was observed. Our findings likely reflect faster brain aging in childhood-onset epilepsy, even in individuals with early remission.

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