Epilepsja u młodych dorosłych: wyzwania kliniczne, psychospołeczne i chirurgiczne
PubMed➕ 29.04.2026Epilepsia
Epilepsy in emerging adulthood: Clinical, psychosocial, and surgical challenges
W skrócie
Badanie wykazało, że młodzi dorośli w wieku 19-29 lat z epilepsją mają większe problemy niż inne grupy wiekowe - gorzej reagują na leki, częściej cierpią na depresję i lęk, oraz więcej sięgają po alkohol i narkotyki. U młodych dorosłych poddawanych operacji mózgu z powodu epilepsji obserwowano więcej powikłań i mniejszą satysfakcję po zabiegu, chociaż osiągali podobne zmniejszenie napadów co pacjenci w innych wieku. Naukowcy podkreślają, że ta grupa wiekowa potrzebuje specjalnego wsparcia psychicznego i wcześniejszej oceny możliwości operacyjnego leczenia epilepsji.
Oryginalny abstract (angielski)
OBJECTIVE: Emerging adulthood (EAs; ages 19-29 years) is a unique developmental stage marked by major psychological, social, and occupational transitions. We sought to characterize the clinical, psychosocial, and surgical features of epilepsy in emerging adulthood, considering both current age and age at epilepsy onset. METHODS: We conducted cross-sectional analyses in two cohorts, an adult epilepsy registry in Calgary, Canada (single tertiary center; first visits 2007-2024), and a multi-center epilepsy surgery satisfaction cohort recruited from three Canadian centers and Gothenburg, Sweden. Age categories were <19, 19-29, and >29 years. Outcomes included seizure freedom, anti-seizure medications, substance use, patient-reported outcomes measures, and surgical characteristics (procedure type, wait times, seizure and psychosocial outcomes, and satisfaction). RESULTS: Of 7439 registry patients, 1724 (23%) were EAs and 1252 had EA-onset epilepsy. Compared with other ages, EAs had lower 1-year seizure freedom and higher depression, anxiety, disability, and substance use (all p's < .001). EA-onset epilepsy showed similar psychosocial burden, especially for anxiety and substance use. In 240 epilepsy surgery patients (69 EAs), EAs were less likely to undergo selective amygdalohippocampectomy (odds ratio [OR] .17, 95% confidence interval [CI] .03-.94) and had higher rates of permanent complications (OR 6.01, 95% CI 1.45-24.94). EA also spent a greater proportion of life waiting for epilepsy surgery and reported lower post-operative psychosocial satisfaction despite a seizure-freedom rate similar to that for other ages. SIGNIFICANCE: Epilepsy during emerging adulthood is associated with elevated psychosocial morbidity and less seizure freedom, whereas EAs undergoing epilepsy surgery have a distinct case profile with comparable seizure freedom, more complications, and lower post-operative psychosocial satisfaction. These findings highlight the distinctive impact of epilepsy during this developmental stage and underscore the need for targeted transitional care, mental-health support, and timely surgical evaluation. Longitudinal studies are warranted to elucidate causal mechanisms and inform targeted interventions.
Metadane publikacji
Journal
Epilepsia
Data publikacji
28.04.2026
PMID
42047514
DOI
10.1002/epi.70221
Autorzy
McLeod GA, Josephson CB, Wiebe S
Słowa kluczowe
emerging adults, epilepsy/seizures, patient‐reported outcome measures, young adults