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Seizure Frequency Trends Over Time in Treatment-Resistant Focal Epilepsy

Potnis, Ojas; Biondo, Gabriel; Sukonik, Rachel; Grzeskowiak, Caitlin; Cutter, Gary; Altalib, Hamada; Kuzniecky, Ruben; Lowenstein, Daniel; French, Jacqueline; ,
IMPORTANCE/UNASSIGNED:Open-label trials of antiseizure medications (ASMs) and devices suggest seizure reduction in focal treatment-resistant epilepsy (FTRE) may demonstrate treatment-related disease-modifying effects. Understanding FTRE trends can provide insight into treatment responses. OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To determine whether seizure frequency in FTRE improves over time. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:The Human Epilepsy Project 2 was a prospective, observational, multicenter study of patients with FTRE from May 2018 to September 2021 who were followed up for 18 to 36 months at 10 US-based comprehensive epilepsy centers. Analysis was performed from 2021 to 2024. Study data included seizure frequency, medication use, device use, surgeries tracked using daily electronic diaries, monthly check-ins, medical record review, and case report forms. Eligibility criteria included focal epilepsy diagnosis, age between 16 and 65 years, and failure of 4 or more ASMs (≥2 due to seizure control failure). Participants were recruited as a volunteer sample. EXPOSURES/UNASSIGNED:Participants were treated with multiple interventions at their physicians' discretion. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:The primary outcome was seizure frequency trends, evaluated by quantifying seizure freedom rates and frequency reductions. Medication and device treatment responses were assessed by tracking ASM and device changes. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Of 196 approached participants, 146 met eligibility criteria and were included in the study. Mean (SD) participant age was 40 (12) years, and epilepsy was diagnosed at a mean (SD) age of 19.8 (13.6) years. The cohort had 84 (57.5%) female participants. A total of 35 participants had implantable devices; 1 had epilepsy surgery during the study. Of 146 participants, 128 provided sufficient seizure data for analysis, and 2 were excluded as outliers. Seizure frequency was reduced in 86 participants (68.3%) during the second half of study participation compared to the first half. In the overall cohort, mean modeled monthly seizure frequency percentage reduction was 68.73% (95% CI, 52.92%-84.54%). From 0 to 12 months (cohort 1), mean modeled percentage reduction was 67.76% (95% CI, 19.42%-116.09%); for 12 to 24 months (cohort 2), 36.00% (95% CI, 9.27%-53.46%); and for longer than 24 months (cohort 3), 66.03% (95% CI, 48.25%-83.80%) (all P < .001). An ASM was added in 69 participants (54.7%), of whom 46 (66.7%) experienced seizure frequency reduction, including seizure freedom. Seizure trajectories in participants with devices did not significantly differ from those without devices. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE/UNASSIGNED:Findings from the HEP2 study imply that FTRE improves over time, ASM additions had low probability of achieving seizure freedom but contributed to seizure reduction, and device-treated participants exhibited similar seizure trajectories to those without devices. Whether improvements reflected the natural history of FTRE or active management remains unclear, but our findings suggest cautious interpretation of open-label studies positing disease-modifying effects and further research into FTRE treatment response.
PMID: 41114972
ISSN: 2168-6157
CID: 5956652

The Neuro-Ophthalmologic Manifestations of SPG7-Associated Disease

Jauregui, Ruben; Diaz Curbelo, Christian; Galetta, Steven L; Grossman, Scott N
The gene SPG7 codes for the protein paraplegin, a subunit of the m-AAA protease in the inner mitochondrial membrane involved in protein quality control. SPG7 was initially identified as causing autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP), with a pure (insidiously progressive bilateral leg weakness and spasticity) and complex (with additional neurologic features including cerebellar signs and optic atrophy) forms. Now identified as one of the most common causes of HSP, SPG7-associated disease has been linked to additional neuro-ophthalmologic features, including isolated dominant optic atrophy, cerebellar eye signs (various forms of nystagmus, dysmetric saccades), progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO), and supranuclear vertical palsy. This review describes in detail the various neuro-ophthalmologic presentations of SPG7-associated disease, illustrating the role of mitochondrial dysfunction in the pathophysiology of these different entities. Knowledge of the different manifestations of SPG7-associated disease is crucial for both neurologists and ophthalmologists, and SPG7 should be considered in the work-up of patients presenting with entities such as optic atrophy, PEO, and cerebellar eye signs.
PMCID:12565430
PMID: 41149856
ISSN: 2075-4426
CID: 5961182

A Great Conversation With Leah Levi

Park, George T; Calix, Rachel A; Dugue, Andrew; Digre, Kathleen B
PMID: 41082180
ISSN: 1536-5166
CID: 5954522

Response to Vogelmann et al: Contextualizing Home-Based tDCS Safety: The Remotely Supervised Model [Letter]

Simani, Leila; Charvet, Leigh; Pilloni, Giuseppina
PMID: 41075934
ISSN: 1876-4754
CID: 5952572

Relapse risk before, during and after pregnancy in MOG antibody-associated disorder: a two-center retrospective study

Kim, Angie H; Pasquale, Olivia; Romanow, Gabriela; Tchen, Heather M; Levy, Michael; Kister, Ilya
BACKGROUND:Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease (MOGAD) is a recently described inflammatory disorder of the central nervous system. Unlike other demyelinating disorders of the central nervous system, the impact of pregnancy and the postpartum period on MOGAD disease activity remains uncertain. A better understanding of pregnancy-related relapse risk in MOGAD is essential to inform management. METHODS:We conducted a retrospective chart review of all patients followed in two large referral centers in the Northeastern United States with a confirmed diagnosis of MOGAD and at least one post-MOGAD onset pregnancy carried to the third trimester. Demographic, neurological, obstetric, and treatment-related data were extracted from electronic medical records, centered around the 12-month pre-pregnancy, pregnancy, and 12-month post-pregnancy periods, for each of which the annualized relapse rates (ARRs) were calculated. RESULTS:We identified 15 women diagnosed with MOGAD who had 22 post-MOGAD onset pregnancies. No relapses were observed during any of the 22 pregnancies, but 2 relapses were observed in the postpartum period in a single patient with a steroid-dependent relapsing course. The mean ARR was 0.26 ± 0.86 during the 12-month pre-pregnancy period, 0 during pregnancy, and 0.09 ± 0.42 in the 12-month postpartum period. Twelve of 22 pregnancies (55 %) were exposed to disease-modifying therapy (DMT) at conception, and 59 % were continued on DMT into the postpartum period. Obstetric complications were recorded in 5 of 22 pregnancies (22 %). CONCLUSIONS:The two main findings of our retrospective study are: 1) the relapse risk is very low during pregnancy in women with MOGAD, and 2) postpartum relapse risk does not appear to be elevated in patients with a low pre-pregnancy relapse rate. Approximately half of the women in our series were receiving disease-modifying therapies during the postpartum period, which may have decreased relapse rates. Larger prospective studies are needed to validate our observations.
PMID: 41066906
ISSN: 1532-2653
CID: 5952202

RRP12 Variants Are Associated With Autosomal Recessive Brain Calcifications

Monfrini, Edoardo; Rinchetti, Paola; Anheim, Mathieu; Klingseisen, Anna; Lagha-Boukbiza, Ouhaid; Cen, Zhidong; Yang, Dehao; Chen, Xinhui; Maroofian, Reza; Houlden, Henry; Cappelletti, Gioia; Richard, Anne-Claire; Quenez, Olivier; Toro, Camilo; Frucht, Steven J; Lotti, Francesco; Luo, Wei; Hunt, David; Nicolas, Gael; Riboldi, Giulietta M
BACKGROUND:Primary brain calcifications are observed in several inherited diseases due to different pathogenic mechanisms, including the disruption of the neurovascular unit, mitochondrial dysfunction, and impaired nucleic acid metabolism. OBJECTIVE:The aim of the study was to identify a novel genetic cause of brain calcifications in genetically unresolved cases. METHODS:Exome sequencing data from two unrelated Pakistani patients with generalized dystonia and primary brain calcifications were analyzed. The best candidate gene (ie, RRP12) was then investigated in two large cohorts of patients with brain calcifications from France (n = 111) and China (n = 543). RRP12 loss-of-function phenotype was explored through Western blot and immunocytofluorescence studies on patient-derived fibroblasts and in a knockdown zebrafish model. RESULTS:A combined approach of exome sequencing and homozygosity mapping allowed the prioritization of a rare homozygous variant in RRP12 (c.1558C>T, p.R520C) in two apparently unrelated Pakistani patients from consanguineous families, presenting with infantile-onset generalized dystonia, spasticity, and widespread brain calcifications. Screening of two large cohorts of patients with unresolved brain calcifications revealed two affected French siblings and one unrelated Chinese individual, each carrying rare, biallelic, missense variants in the RRP12 gene (c.1429G>A, p.E477K and c.2634T>G, p.F878L, respectively). Molecular studies revealed a significant reduction in RRP12 protein and abnormal nucleolar morphology in patient'derived fibroblasts. Consistent with its essential role in RNA metabolism, rrp12 knockdown in zebrafish caused severe developmental delay, crimping, and early lethality. CONCLUSIONS:RRP12 is a novel candidate gene for autosomal recessive brain calcifications, possibly associated with a wide clinical spectrum ranging from early-onset severe forms to adult-onset paucisymptomatic presentations. © 2025 The Author(s). Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
PMID: 41059649
ISSN: 1531-8257
CID: 5951882

Conus medullaris myelitis associated with HHV-6 in an immunocompetent young adult [Letter]

Saab, Lea; Li, Melanie; Brandes, Lauren; Merati, Melody
PMID: 41100971
ISSN: 1878-5883
CID: 5955122

Boosting Sensitivity through a Multianalyte Cerebrospinal Fluid Approach for Diagnosis, Prognostication, and Immune Monitoring for Brain Tumors

Weiss, Hannah K; Fang, Camila S; Orringer, Daniel A; Miller, Alexandra M
The CSF-BAM assay, developed by Pearlman, Wang, and colleagues, integrates the detection of somatic mutations, genome aneuploidy, and B- and T-cell receptor clonality from a single cerebrospinal fluid DNA library to increase the sensitivity of cerebrospinal fluid to diagnosis and track brain tumors. See related article by Pearlman et al., p. 2002.
PMID: 41047842
ISSN: 2159-8290
CID: 5951432

Risk markers for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: an observational, prospective, multicentre cohort study

Ochoa-Urrea, Manuela; Luo, Xi; Vilella, Laura; Lacuey, Nuria; Omidi, Shirin Jamal; Hupp, Norma J; Talavera, Blanca; Hampson, Johnson P; Rani, M R Sandhya; Tao, Shiqiang; Li, Xiaojin; Miyake, Christina Y; Cui, Licong; Hampson, Jaison S; Chaitanya, Ganne; Vakilna, Yash Shashank; Sainju, Rup K; Friedman, Daniel; Nei, Maromi; Allen, Luke; Scott, Catherine A; Oliveira, Joana; Gehlbach, Brian; Schuele, Stephan U; Ogren, Jennifer A; Harper, Ronald M; Diehl, Beate; Bateman, Lisa M; Richerson, George B; Yamal, Jose-Miguel; Zhang, Guo-Qiang; Devinsky, Orrin; Lhatoo, Samden D
BACKGROUND:Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is the leading cause of epilepsy-related mortality. Generalised-particularly nocturnal-convulsive seizures, longstanding epilepsy, and solitary living have been identified retrospectively as risk factors. No definitive electroclinical biomarkers have been prospectively ascertained. This study aimed to identify SUDEP risk markers using multimodality data with long-term follow-up. METHODS:This prospective, multicentre, observational cohort study, conducted at nine centres (eight in the USA and one in the UK), recruited children and adults with epilepsy who were undergoing prolonged video-electroencephalographic (EEG) monitoring. Inclusion criteria were diagnosis of epilepsy by an epilepsy specialist, with or without drug resistance; age older than 2 months; admission to the epilepsy monitoring unit of a participating centre, with video-EEG monitoring; and completion of at least one 6-month follow-up. Demographic, electroclinical, and cardiorespiratory data were collected at baseline. Participants were followed up long term through routine clinic visits, review of electronic health records, and telephone interviews to collect information about seizure frequency, medication status, and mortality. The primary endpoint was time to SUDEP. Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess significant risk factors. FINDINGS/RESULTS:Between Sept 17, 2011, and Dec, 30, 2021, 2632 children and adults with epilepsy were enrolled in this study; 164 were lost to follow-up. 38 (1·54%) of 2468 participants died from SUDEP (12 definite, 18 probable, and eight possible SUDEP cases) and two had near-SUDEP events. Incident SUDEP mortality rate was 4·76 (95% CI 3·37-6·53) cases per 1000 person-years, from a cohort of 7982 person-years. Living alone (hazard ratio 7·62, 95% CI 3·94-14·71), three or more generalised convulsive seizures in the previous year (3·1, 1·64-5·87]), longer ictal central apnoea (1·11, 1·05-1·18), and longer postictal central apnoea (1·32, 1·14-1·54]) were significant predictors of increased SUDEP risk. In a subanalysis excluding possible and near-SUDEP cases, longer ictal central apnoea was not significant. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:This study shows an association between premortem peri-ictal apnoea and increased SUDEP risk. Cardiorespiratory monitoring during seizures might benefit assessments of epilepsy mortality risk. Together with solitary living and convulsive seizure frequency, peri-ictal apnoea (>14 s for postictal central apnoea and >17 s for ictal central apnoea) could inform the development of a validatable SUDEP risk index. FUNDING/BACKGROUND:US National Institutes of Health.
PMID: 40975113
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 5935812

Smartphone-Based Muscle Relaxation for Migraine in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Minen, Mia T; Seng, Elizabeth K; Friedman, Benjamin W; George, Alexis D; Fanning, Kristina M; Bostic, Ryan C; Powers, Scott W; Lipton, Richard B
IMPORTANCE/UNASSIGNED:The emergency department (ED) is a critical point of contact within the health care system and an opportunity to initiate nonpharmacologic migraine treatment. OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To examine whether progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) smartphone-based migraine self-management improved patient-reported outcomes for migraine compared with enhanced usual care. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:A randomized clinical trial of the smartphone application RELAXaHEAD with and without PMR. Patients aged 18 to 65 years visiting New York University Langone Health EDs for headache who met migraine criteria and self reported 4 or more migraine days per month were recruited from June 2019 to October 2021 with follow-up at 3 months. Data were analyzed from June 2022 to June 2025. INTERVENTION/UNASSIGNED:Participants in the intervention group were asked to listen to the app-based PMR for 60 days. Participants in the control group were asked to use the app as a symptom diary. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES/UNASSIGNED:Primary outcome was change in migraine-related disability (MIDAS). Secondary outcomes were change in migraine-specific quality of life (MSQv2) and monthly headache days (MHDs). Adherence (number of days of diary use, PMR use and total minutes of PMR use over 90-day period) was measured using back-end analytics. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Of the 94 patients (median [IQR] age, 33 [26-45] years; 57 [82.6%] female) randomized (48 control patients and 46 PMR patients), 69 of 94 (73%) had 1 or more follow-up MIDAS scores and constituted the modified intent-to-treat population (35 control patients and 34 PMR patients). The mean (SD) change in MIDAS scores from baseline to 3 months (last observation carried forward [LOCF] used if missing 3-month follow-up data) differed between groups (PMR, 25.09 [29.64] vs control, 6.86 [59.61]; P = .01). PMR had nearly double the number of respondents improving by 5 or more MIDAS points (28 of 34 [82.4%] vs 16 of 35 [45.7%] respondents; P = .002). There was no difference in MSQv2 domains from baseline to LOCF between PMR and control (mean [SD] role function preventive domain for PMR, 16.9 [24.5] vs control, 11.3 [25.9]); emotional function domain (mean [SD] for PMR, 26.5 [26.9] vs control, 19.8 [38.5]); and role function restrictive domain (mean [SD] for PMR, 18.1 [22.7] vs control, 18.7 [26.8]). Mean (SD) change in MHDs (baseline to 3 months) did not differ between groups (PMR, 2.9 [8.0]; 23 days vs control, -1.6 [6.5]; 25 days). CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE/UNASSIGNED:A PMR-based self-management program offered to patients with migraine after ED discharge yielded clinically significant reductions in migraine-related disability. TRIAL REGISTRATION/UNASSIGNED:ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04281030.
PMCID:12531881
PMID: 41100087
ISSN: 2574-3805
CID: 5955092