Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Epidemiology
2.1. Risk Factors
2.2. Pathophysiology
2.2.1. Cardiac Hypothesis
2.2.2. Autonomic Dysfunction
2.2.3. Respiratory and Cerebral Dysfunctions
2.3. Treatment for the Prevention of Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy
2.3.1. Counseling and Education
2.3.2. Optimize Treatment of Drug-Resistant Epilepsy
2.3.3. Seizure-Monitoring Devices
2.3.4. Preventing Airway Obstruction
2.3.5. Reducing Brain and Brainstem Depression from Endogenous Opioids and Adenosine
2.3.6. Cardiac and Diaphragmatic Pacing
2.3.7. Clinical Practice Recommendations
3. Recent Clinical Findings
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gene | Clinical Condition | Function | SUDEP Hypothesis |
---|---|---|---|
SCN1A | Dravet syndrome, generalizedepilepsy with febrile seizures | Sodium channel | Increases epilepsyseverity by postictal parasympathetichyperactivity |
SCN2A | Epileptic encephalopathy | Sodium channel | Increases severity of epilepsy |
SCN8A | Epileptic encephalopathy | Sodium channel | Increases severity of epilepsy |
PRRT2 | Benign familial infantile seizures | Proline-rich transmembrane protein 2 | Potential interaction withSNAP-25 and presynapticneurotransmitter release |
DEPDC5 | Focal epilepsy | G-protein signaling pathway, inhibits the mTORC1 pathway | Potential increase in severity of epilepsy |
CSTB | Unverricht-Lundborg disease | Inhibits intracellular thiol protease, prevents protease leakage from Lysosomes | Increases severity of epilepsy and neurological impairment due toprogressive myoclonic epilepsy |
TSC1, TSC2 | Tuberous sclerosis complex | Downregulates mTORC1 pathway | Potential increase in severity of epilepsy |
HCN2 | Generalized epilepsy | Contributes to spontaneous rhythmic activity in SA node and brain | Potential impairment inbrainstem or cardiac pacemaker cells |
KCNQ1 | Long QT syndrome | Potassium channel; ventricular repolarization | Potentialarrhythmogenic effect |
KCNH2 | Long QT syndrome | Potassium channel;repolarization of cardiac action potential | Uncertain |
SCN5A | Long QT syndrome | Sodium channel; rapid depolarizing sodium current underlying cardiac action potential upstroke | Potential combination of epilepsy and arrhythmia |
NOS1AP | Long QT syndrome | Cytosolic protein that binds to neuronal nitric oxide synthase | Potential combination of epilepsy and arrhythmia |
RYR2 | Sudden cardiac death | Cardiac ryanodine receptor 2; intracellular calcium release channel, coupling excitation–contraction | Potential combination of epilepsy and arrhythmia |
HCN4 | Bradycardia, sick sinus syndrome | Potassiumchannel; slow kinetics of activation and inactivation, cardiacpacemaker role | Variant identified in SUDEP |
Grade B | Effective epilepsy treatment to decrease the burden of GTCS protects against SUDEP. Providers should use appropriate anti-seizure medications and combine ASM where necessary to achieve seizure control, while actively involving patients in their care and weighing the safety profile of the medications. |
Grade C | Based on risk profile and psychosocial circumstances, clinicians should selectively counsel patients with frequent uncontrolled nocturnal seizures on nocturnal supervision, as this is protective against SUDEP. |
Grade C | Prompt referral for surgical evaluation of drug-resistant epilepsy/lesional epilepsy is of paramount importance in reducing the risk of SUDEP. |
Author (Year) | Intervention | Results and Findings | Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|
J. Helen Cross et al. (2021) [63] | Fenfluramine (FFA) added to anti-seizure medication for Dravet syndrome patients to assess its effect on the SUDEP mortality rate. | All-cause and SUDEP mortality rates were significantly lower than expected compared to estimates from literature studies. | FFA might have a role in reducing SUDEP in patients with Dravet syndrome. More studies will be required to ascertain if this effect is sustainable and applicable to other causes of SUDEP. |
V. Salanova et al. (2021) [64] | Adults with severe epilepsy underwent deep brain stimulation surgery with leads implanted in the anterior thalamus (ANT DBS). They were followed up over 7–10 years. | The observed SUDEP rate was lower for patients with drug-resistant epilepsy, including patients being treated with adjunctive ASMs or considered for epilepsy surgery. | ANT DBS is associated with sustained improvement in seizure reduction over time. This reduction is possibly responsible for the reduction in SUDEP risk. |
Vilella et al. (2019) [65] | Patients with intractable epilepsy (n = 87) underwent monitoring of autonomic and breathing biomarkers in epilepsy monitoring units. | Post-convulsive central apnea (PCCA) was associated with near-SUDEP phenomena and SUDEP. | The authors suggest PCCA is a possible SUDEP biomarker. |
Author (Year) | Groups Studied | Results and Findings | Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|
Myers et al. (2018) [66] | HRV data were compared between a group of patients with SCN mutation drug-resistant epilepsy and a control group of non-SCN drug-resistant epilepsy. | SUDEP patients had more severe autonomic dysregulation. This dysregulation was worse in the SCN mutation group. | The authors suggest autonomic dysfunction is associated with SUDEP risk in patients with epilepsy due to SCN mutations. |
Sivathamboo et al. (2021) [67] | A retrospective nested case–control study evaluated interictal ECG recordings among patients admitted for video EEG recording | Normalized LFP was lower in SUDEP cases than in matched controls. Every 1% reduction in normalized LFP conferred a 2.7% increase in latency to SUDEP. | The authors conclude reduced short-term LFP is associated with SUDEP. They suggest that increased LFP may be associated with longer survival. |
Cihan et al. (2020) [68] | Over 2 years and in 3 diverse geographic regions, SUDEP rates plus certain demographic, biometric, and clinical variables were compared with community SES. | 159 SUDEP cases in the lowest quartile zip codes and 49 cases in the highest quartile zip codes. No reported difference in age, sex, BMI, epilepsy etiology, circumstances of death, nonadherence to medication, and comorbid conditions between highest and lowest quartile SES zip codes. | The authors concluded SUDEP rates were >2 times higher among people with epilepsy living in lowest income communities compared to the highest income communities. |
Rasekhi et al. (2021) [69] | A retrospective case–control study evaluated 48 patients with epilepsy who underwent EEG monitoring and subsequently died of definite or probable SUDEP. Two matched controls with epilepsy were identified for each individual who died of SUDEP. | SUDEP-7 scores were significantly higher in the SUDEP group than in matched controls, both at the time of admission and last follow-up. | The authors conclude that results support the ability of SUDEP-7 inventory to predict SUDEP. However, it does not enhance the prediction of SUDEP over-generalized tonic-clonic seizure or seizure frequency alone. They propose a new tool—SUDEP-3 inventory, which improves predictive performance. |
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O’Neal, T.B.; Shrestha, S.; Singh, H.; Osagie, I.; Ben-Okafor, K.; Cornett, E.M.; Kaye, A.D. Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy. Neurol. Int. 2022, 14, 600-613. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint14030048
O’Neal TB, Shrestha S, Singh H, Osagie I, Ben-Okafor K, Cornett EM, Kaye AD. Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy. Neurology International. 2022; 14(3):600-613. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint14030048
Chicago/Turabian StyleO’Neal, Teri B., Sanjay Shrestha, Harsimar Singh, Ihianle Osagie, Kenechukwu Ben-Okafor, Elyse M. Cornett, and Alan D. Kaye. 2022. "Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy" Neurology International 14, no. 3: 600-613. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint14030048
APA StyleO’Neal, T. B., Shrestha, S., Singh, H., Osagie, I., Ben-Okafor, K., Cornett, E. M., & Kaye, A. D. (2022). Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy. Neurology International, 14(3), 600-613. https://doi.org/10.3390/neurolint14030048