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Abstract

First line treatments for infantile spasms has varied impact on outcomes especially in developing countries with resource limited settings. We sought to identify the impact of first line treatment on cessation of spasms, long-term epilepsy and developmental outcomes along with influence of etiology and lead time to treatment in a tertiary care hospital in south India. Electronic case records of infants between 3 months and 1 year of age diagnosed with infantile spasm who received first-line treatment including combination therapy between 2014 and 2018 were retrospectively reviewed for clinical details, electroencephalogram (EEG), etiology, treatment modality and their adverse effects, Infantile spasm cessation, developmental and long-term epilepsy outcomes. 


The study included forty-four cases (32 boy, 12 girls), with mean age of onset at 7.6 weeks ± 3.5 weeks, median delay in diagnosis at 2 weeks (range of 1 day- 24 weeks), median  lead time to treatment at 3.5 weeks (range 1 day- 28 weeks). First- line management was associated with cessation of spams in majority (67%) with no statistically significant difference in outcome based on choice of first-line agents. However, need for more than one first-line agents was associated with relatively more unfavorable long-term outcome. Structural etiology of Infantile Spasm was associated (p=0.001) with long- term epilepsy. Early treatment of Infantile spasms (<2 weeks) was associated with better (p=0.014) developmental outcome. In conclusion, clear guidelines are needed in developing countries including identification of etiology and early treatment of infantile spasms with first-line agents to improve developmental outcomes.

Keywords

Infantile Spasms, West Syndrome, Steroid, Corticosteroid, Prednisolone, Hypsarrhythmia, Epilepsy

Article Details

How to Cite
Gopinathan Nair, D., Banerjee , B., L, G., & Sankar, D. C. (2024). Response to first line treatment, epilepsy and developmental outcome in Infantile Spasms-Retrospective cohort from tertiary care hospital – A developing country perspective. Journal of the International Child Neurology Association, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.17724/jicna.2024.223
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