Abstract

Purpose: Anxiety and depression are highly prevalent in patients with epilepsy (PWE), and these symptoms can even precede the onset of the pathology. We aimed to define the prevalence of anxiety and depressive symptoms at the time of the epilepsy diagnosis and the factors related to their presence in newly diagnosed adult patients.Methods: One hundred and twelve newly diagnosed patients were assessed, usually in the week after diagnosis. Patients were untreated at this time. We used the Neurological Disorders Depression Inventory for Epilepsy (NDDI-E, cut-off ≥15) and the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-Item scale (GAD-7, cut-off >7). A semi-structured interview was conducted to collect sociodemographic and epilepsy data and patients' psychiatric history. We first compared patients with and without anxiety symptoms, then patients with and without depressive symptoms.Results: According to the GAD-7 scale, the prevalence of anxiety symptoms at the time of diagnosis was 35%. Patients with anxiety symptoms had significantly more psychiatric history (26%, p = 0.001) and more history of psychological trauma (51%, p = 0.003) than patients with no anxiety symptoms. According to the NDDI-E scores, the prevalence of depressive symptoms at the time of the diagnosis was 11%. Patients with depressive symptoms had significantly more psychiatric history (43%, p < 0.001) and more history of psychological trauma (65%, p = 0.007) than patients with no depressive symptoms. No difference between groups was found for other sociodemographic variables (age and gender), epilepsy characteristics (number of seizures prior to diagnosis, time from first seizure to diagnosis, type of epilepsy, and localization in focal epilepsy), or neurological comorbidities.Conclusions: Anxiety symptoms are common whereas depressive symptoms are less prevalent at the time of diagnosis. It appears essential to be aware of anxiety and depression in newly diagnosed epileptic patients. They should be screened and routinely monitored, especially those patients with a history of psychological trauma and/or psychiatric disorders. Longitudinal follow-up is required to identify whether these factors and anxiety and depression themselves have an impact on the future course of care.

Highlights

  • Epilepsy is a chronic multifactorial neurological disease encompassing psychological factors, as described in the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) definition: “epilepsy is a disorder of the brain characterized by an enduring predisposition to generate epileptic seizures and by the neurobiological, cognitive, psychological, and social consequences of this condition” [1]

  • We considered newly diagnosed epilepsy (NDE) to include new-onset epilepsy (NOE), which corresponds to the onset of seizures within the last year

  • We found that previous psychiatric comorbidity was implicated in the occurrence of anxiety and/or depressive symptoms in NDE

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Summary

Introduction

Epilepsy is a chronic multifactorial neurological disease encompassing psychological factors, as described in the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) definition: “epilepsy is a disorder of the brain characterized by an enduring predisposition to generate epileptic seizures and by the neurobiological, cognitive, psychological, and social consequences of this condition” [1]. Patients with epilepsy (PWE) have a higher risk of developing psychiatric comorbidities, which can affect one-third of patients [2]. The estimated prevalence of depression is around 23.1% and comorbid anxiety affects 20.2% of PWE [5, 6]. These studies looked at all types of epilepsy combined (drug-resistant and drug-sensitive epilepsy), whereas the risk of experiencing psychiatric comorbidities is four times higher in drug-resistant epilepsy [7, 8]. People with mood and anxiety disorders have a seven-fold increase in the risk of developing epilepsy [9,10,11,12,13]

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