Mortality risk in adults with intellectual disabilities and epilepsy: an England and Wales case–control study

James J. Sun, Lance Watkins, William Henley, Richard Laugharne, Heather Angus-Leppan, Indermeet Sawhney, Meissam Moghaddassian Shahidi, Kiran Purandare, Mogbeyiteren Eyeoyibo, Mark Scheepers, Geraldine Lines, Robert Winterhalder, Bhathika Perera, Benjamin Hyams, Samantha Ashby, Rohit Shankar*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background People with epilepsy (PWE) and people with intellectual disabilities (ID) both live shorter lives than the general population and both conditions increase the risk of death further. We aimed to measure associations between certain risk factors for death in PWE and ID. Methods A retrospective case–control study was conducted in ten regions in England and Wales. Data were collected on PWE registered with secondary care ID and neurology services between 2017 and 2021. Prevalence rates of neurodevelopmental, psychiatric and medical diagnoses, seizure frequency, psychotropic and antiseizure medications (ASM) prescribed, and health activity (epilepsy reviews/risk assessments/care plans/compliance etc.) recorded were compared between the two groups. Results 190 PWE and ID who died were compared with 910 living controls. People who died were less likely to have had an epilepsy risk assessment but had a greater prevalence of genetic conditions, older age, poor physical health, generalized tonic–clonic seizures, polypharmacy (not ASMs) and antipsychotic use. The multivariable logistic regression for risk of epilepsy-related death identified that age over 50, medical condition prevalence, antipsychotic medication use and the lack of an epilepsy review in the last 12 months as associated with increased risk of death. Reviews by psychiatrists in ID services was associated with a 72% reduction in the odds of death compared neurology services. Conclusions Polypharmacy and use of antipsychotics may be associated with death but not ASMs. Greater and closer monitoring by creating capable health communities may reduce the risk of death. ID services maybe more likely to provide this holistic approach.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3527-3536
Number of pages0
JournalJournal of Neurology
Volume270
Issue number7
Early online date6 Apr 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2023

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