Abstract

RationaleRecent cross-sectional investigations have demonstrated an adverse impact of socioeconomic disadvantage on cognition and behavior in youth and adults with epilepsy. The goal of this study is to investigate the impact of disadvantage on prospective intellectual development in youth with epilepsy. MethodParticipants were youth, aged 8–18 years, with recent onset epilepsy (n = 182) and healthy first-degree cousin controls (n = 106). The Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence (WASI) was administered at baseline and 2 years later. The Neighborhood Atlas identified each family’s Area Deprivation Index via state deciles and national percentiles. WASI data were analyzed by mixed group by time ANOVAs followed by regression analysis to identify other baseline predictors of time 2 outcomes. ResultsYouth with epilepsy demonstrated significant interactions between group and time for both verbal (F = 4.02, df = 1,215, p =.05) and nonverbal (F = 4.57, df = 1,215, p =.04) reasoning, demonstrating that disadvantage was associated with slower cognitive development compared to advantaged youth with epilepsy. Similar interactions were not observed for controls. ConclusionsIn youth with new and recent onset epilepsies, neighborhood-level disadvantage is associated with a negative impact on the development of verbal and nonverbal reasoning skills.

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