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Clinically based score predicting cryptogenic NORSE at the early stage of status epilepticus

Atsuko Yanagida, Naomi Kanazawa, Juntaro Kaneko, Atsushi Kaneko, Ryoko Iwase, Hiroki Suga, Yutaka Nonoda, Yuya Onozawa, Eiji Kitamura, Kazutoshi Nishiyama, Takahiro Iizuka

2020Neurology Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a clinically based score predicts cryptogenic new-onset refractory status epilepticus (C-NORSE) at the early stage of status epilepticus (SE) with prominent motor symptoms (SE-M) of unclear etiology. METHODS: The score (range 0-6) included 6 clinical features: highly refractoriness to antiseizure drugs, previously healthy individual, presence of prodromal fever, absence of prodromal psychobehavioral or memory alterations, absence of dyskinesias, and symmetric brain MRI abnormalities (the first 2 mandatory). We retrospectively assessed the usefulness of a high scale score (≥5) in predicting C-NORSE in 83 patients with SE-M of unclear etiology, who underwent testing for neuronal surface antibodies (NS-Abs) between January 2007, and December 2019. RESULTS: Thirty-one (37.3%) patients had a high score. Patients with a high score had more frequent prodromal fever (28/31 vs 24/52), mechanical ventilatory support (31/31 vs 36/52), and symmetric MRI abnormalities (26/31 vs 12/52), had less frequent involuntary movements (2/31 vs 30/52), and had absent prodromal psychobehavioral alterations (0/31 vs 27/52), CSF oligoclonal band detection (0/27 vs 11/38), tumor association (0/31 vs 13/52), or NS-Abs (0/31 vs 29/52) than those with a low score (<5). Thirty-three patients (median age, 27 years; 18 [54.5%] female) were finally regarded as C-NORSE. The sensitivity and specificity of a high score for predicting C-NORSE were 93.9% (95% CI 0.87-0.94) and 100% (95% CI 0.95-1.00), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with a high score in the indicated scale are more likely to have C-NORSE, making it a useful diagnostic tool at the early stage of SE-M before antibody test results become available.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineStatus epilepticusEtiologyInternal medicineRefractory (planetary science)GastroenterologyEpilepsyPsychiatryPhysicsAstrobiologyEpilepsy research and treatmentAutoimmune Neurological Disorders and TreatmentsPsychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments