Modification of Epilepsy Screen Questionnaire and Treatment Feasibility Evaluation
NCT ID: NCT04939675
Last Updated: 2021-06-25
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
40 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-07-01
2025-06-30
Brief Summary
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In this study, we have two aims. The first aim is to develop a screening questionnaire by adding new semiology of epilepsy, including abnormality in psychiatry, cognition, and sleep, and to test its accuracy. The second aim is to evaluate the benefits in cognition of anti-epileptic drug intervention in participants with positive screening results.
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Detailed Description
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The screening of epilepsy was based on questionnaires, including questions inquiring whether the patients have motor manifestation of epilepsy, including motor convulsion, twitching (myoclonus), behavior arrest, sudden falling, loss of consciousness, or known diagnosis of epilepsy. Recently, literature has reported atypical initial presentation of epilepsy such as rapid cognitive decline and mood disturbance. A study of patients with severe psychiatric disorders has also found that 1.6% cases had undiagnosed epilepsy, which was higher than that in general population. Atypical presentations in epilepsy may include confusion status, acute maniac or delirious condition, loss of cognitive ability such as speech, interaction skills, or other praxis. Additionally, vomiting, terrors, or hyperkinetic movements during sleep may also be observed in patients with epilepsy. Indeed, the International League Against Epilepsy has included cognitive, emotional, and sensory as non-motor onset presentations in its new classification.
The diagnosis of epilepsy was based on any at least two unprovoked (or reflex) seizures occurring \>24 h apart. However, the diagnosis did not address on definition of seizure. Anti-seizure medications (ASMs) had been reported to improve cognitive performance in the older people with cognitive impairment and epileptiform discharge on electroencephalography. There was also a report of recovery of long-term anterograde amnesia after initiation of an ASM in a case of transient epileptic amnesia. The new insights of seizure semiology and their treatment response, suggest the screen tool and diagnostic criteria of epilepsy can be revised.
In this study, we have two aims. The first aim is to develop a screening questionnaire by adding new semiology of epilepsy, including abnormality in psychiatry, cognition, and sleep, and to test its accuracy. We used the 9-question screening questionnaire as a backbone. Additional questions included Q10: sleep events including sleep-onset vomiting, night scare, or hyperkinetic movement paroxysmal cognitive events (Q11: any paroxysmal agitation or confusion; Q12: any paroxysmal function loss, including communication, praxis, or other mental function); rapid progressive events (Q13: rapid progressive cognitive decline; Q14: recent hallucination, delusion, change in mood and behaviors). The questionnaire will then be translated into traditional Chinese version by a bilingual qualified neurologist. The translated version will then back-translated into English by an independent bilingual researcher and will finally be determined by a group of experts in neuropathy, pain, and linguistics.
The second aim is to evaluate the benefits in cognition of anti-epileptic drug intervention in participants with positive screening results. After excluding participants with diagnosis of epilepsy per criteria as above, participants are recruited to the antiepileptic drug trial if they fulfill positive responses in Q11-Q14 of the questionnaire or the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) ≦ 24, and presence of epileptiform discharge in electroencephalography (EEG), including spikes, sharp waves, temporal intermittent rhythmic delta activity, or other focal or generalized slow waves that could not be explained by physiological or anatomical pathology. Participants who fulfill criteria will be included in this open-labeled randomized study to test efficacy of anti-seizure medication (ASM) in these patients.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Anti-seizure medication
The intervention group will receive anti-epileptic drug treatment according to the guideline of American Epilepsy Society 15 for 12 weeks. The recommended regimens include zonisamide, lamotrigine, or levetiracetam at the minimal therapeutic doses (zonisamide 100mg twice daily, levetiracetam 500mg twice daily, lamotrigine 50mg twice daily), and the choices depend on tolerability of the participants and contraindications (allergy to any drugs, or allergy to sulphonamides in zonisamide users). The participants will be followed every 4 weeks.
Zonisamide 100mg
Only one ASM will be used. The drug choice depends on patients tolerance and basic condition. Twice daily
Levetiracetam 500mg
Only one ASM will be used. The drug choice depends on patients tolerance and basic condition. Twice daily
LamoTRIgine 50mg
Only one ASM will be used. The drug choice depends on patients tolerance and basic condition. Twice daily
Observation
The participants will be followed every 4 weeks without anti-seizure medication.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Zonisamide 100mg
Only one ASM will be used. The drug choice depends on patients tolerance and basic condition. Twice daily
Levetiracetam 500mg
Only one ASM will be used. The drug choice depends on patients tolerance and basic condition. Twice daily
LamoTRIgine 50mg
Only one ASM will be used. The drug choice depends on patients tolerance and basic condition. Twice daily
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
2. Pregnancy or breast-feeding
3. Having adverse effect to all the anti-epileptic drug used in the study
20 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Taiwan University Hospital
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Kai-Chieh Chang, M.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
National Taiwan University Hospital
Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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202104076MINA
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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