Badanie Epilepsy-Cog: Metody do stworzenia ujednoliconego badania epilepsji powstałej w starszym wieku w sześciu populacyjnych kohortach w Stanach Zjednoczonych

PubMedEpilepsia

The Epilepsy-Cog study: Methods to establish a harmonized study of late onset epilepsy in a metacohort of six population-based cohorts in the United States

W skrócie

Naukowcy połączyli dane z sześciu dużych amerykańskich badań populacyjnych, aby lepiej zrozumieć epilepsję pojawiającą się u ludzi po 65 roku życia. Wśród ponad 43 tysięcy uczestników znaleźli osoby z epilepsją i przeanalizowali ich dane medyczne, Style życia oraz czynniki ryzyka choroby. To połączone badanie ma pomóc lekarzom w lepszym zrozumieniu przyczyn i sposobów leczenia epilepsji u osób starszych.

Oryginalny abstract (angielski)

OBJECTIVE: With the expected demographic shift toward those ≥65 years of age in the United States, late onset epilepsy (LOE) poses a significant public health issue, yet it has been historically understudied. We are undertaking an effort in the Epilepsy-Cog study to pool individual participant data from six United States-based prospective cohort studies. In this paper, we outline the process for ascertaining epilepsy, harmonizing, and pooling individual participant data across the six cohorts. METHODS: The Epilepsy-Cog study includes individual participant data from six United States-based longitudinal cohort studies: Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, Cardiovascular Health Study, Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, Northern Manhattan Study (NOMAS), Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke, and Washington Heights/Inwood Columbia Aging Project. In all cohorts except NOMAS, prevalent and incident epilepsy were ascertained using Medicare claims-based algorithms. In NOMAS, epilepsy cases were identified through cohort-based reporting and medical record review. To perform cross-cohort harmonization of variables, we used the lowest common denominator approach, assigning response categories or value levels in common across all cohorts. RESULTS: From a total of 68 544 participants across six cohorts, 43 753 participants met eligibility criteria for Epilepsy-Cog. Among them, we identified 551 (1.3%) participants with prevalent epilepsy and 1500 (3.4%) participants with incident epilepsy. We have harmonized demographic characteristics, health behaviors, vascular risk factors (VRFs), one genetic variable, medication use, subjective health status measures, incident events, and cause-of-death variables. SIGNIFICANCE: The Epilepsy-Cog pooled cohort of 43 753 participants with and without epilepsy, combined with harmonized demographic, VRF, and event data, offers a unique resource to yield new insights into LOE.

Metadane publikacji

Journal
Epilepsia
Data publikacji
02.07.2026
PMID
42390300
DOI
10.1002/epi.70361
Autorzy
Choi H, Gutierrez J, Wang T, Liu M, Leu CS, Misiewicz S, Han J, Bello N, Biggs ML, Briceño EM
Słowa kluczowe
case ascertainment, cohort studies, epilepsy, harmonization, multicohort, older adults
Źródło
PubMed