# Assessing the Need for Repeat EEG in Pediatric Patients with Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy After Anti-Seizure Medication Withdrawal Following Seizure Freedom

**Authors:** Sita Paudel, Madison Heebner, Gayatra Mainali, Jaclyn S. Tencer, Rhea Kanwar, Katherine Martel, Ashutosh Kumar, Sunil C. Naik, Sandeep Pradhan, Prakash Kandel, Douglas Leslie

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/08830738241292836 · Journal of Child Neurology · 2024-12-10

## TL;DR

This study examines how often EEGs are used to monitor children with epilepsy after stopping medication and whether they are restarted based on EEG results.

## Contribution

The study provides insights into EEG usage and medication restart patterns among pediatric epilepsy patients after medication withdrawal.

## Key findings

- 32% of patients had a repeat EEG within 6 months of medication withdrawal.
- 17.6% of those with EEGs showed abnormal results, leading to medication restart in 66% of cases.
- No patients with abnormal EEGs experienced seizure relapse.

## Abstract

Most patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsy have good seizure control on antiseizure medications. Although idiopathic generalized epilepsy subtypes such as juvenile absence epilepsy and juvenile myoclonic epilepsy have a high risk of relapse, childhood absence epilepsy may have seizure remission. After 2 years of seizure freedom in childhood absence epilepsy, typically antiseizure medications are discontinued, but follow-up protocols are unclear. This study aims to evaluate how often patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsy undergo electroencephalography (EEG) after antiseizure medication withdrawal, how often antiseizure medications are restarted based on EEG findings, and if this varies between physicians and advanced practice providers at our institution.

This was a retrospective chart review. Data were collected using electronic medical records of pediatric patients (<18 years) with idiopathic generalized epilepsy who were successfully weaned off antiseizure medications at Penn State Children's Hospital from 2010 to 2020.

We reviewed 1409 charts and found 52 patients meeting criteria. Seventeen of 52 patients (32%) had a repeat EEG within 6 months of antiseizure medication withdrawal following seizure freedom. Of those 17 patients, 3 (17.6%) had generalized epileptiform discharges on EEG. Of these 3 patients, 2 (66%) were restarted on antiseizure medications based on the abnormal EEG. None had seizure relapse.

Obtaining a repeat EEG in patients after antiseizure medication withdrawal following seizure freedom is common. Patients with an abnormal EEG are often restarted on antiseizure medications, irrespective of clinical seizure relapse. Considering the high health care costs of EEGs and antiseizure medication side effects, we propose that if patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsy do well clinically following antiseizure medication withdrawal, EEGs may not be necessary.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** idiopathic generalized epilepsy (MONDO:0005579), juvenile absence epilepsy (MONDO:0800453), juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (MONDO:0009696), childhood absence epilepsy (MONDO:0010826)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (taxon 9606)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** epileptiform discharges (MESH:D019522), Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy (MESH:C562694), absence epilepsy (MESH:D004832), Seizure (MESH:D012640), juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (MESH:D020190)
- **Chemicals:** antiseizure medication (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11909770/full.md

## References

24 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11909770/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11909770