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HEP is a five-year, prospective, observational study whose primary goal is to identify clinical characteristics and biomarkers predictive of disease outcome, progression, and treatment response in participants with newly treated focal epilepsy.
Full description
Epilepsy is a serious disease. It affects approximately 2.4 million Americans, with a lifetime risk estimated at 3%. More than 181,000 Americans develop epilepsy every year, and a substantial proportion has seizures that cannot be controlled by available medications. For the vast majority of patients with epilepsy, we do not understand the biological basis of their disease; we do not know whether a given anti-epileptic drug (AED) will be effective; and we cannot predict the severity of the seizure disorder, the potential emergence of co-morbidities, or the likelihood of remission.
The Human Epilepsy Project seeks to answer these unknowns by collecting high-resolution clinical information and treatment response, MRIs, EEGs, and blood and urine samples for biomarkers. A major outcome of the project is to create an open data repository of clinical information and biologic samples for future studies.
HEP may have a transformative impact on epilepsy diagnosis and treatment by identifying critical clinical features and biomarkers at the onset of epilepsy that can be used to predict outcome and guide therapy. We hope to identify subsets of patients at high risk for pharmacoresistance who may benefit from more aggressive initial therapy and earlier consideration for surgical treatment. The existence of biomarkers that predict the likelihood of disease remission would dramatically affect treatment decisions and counseling for millions of patients.
In addition to its impact on current clinical care, the data and specimens collected in HEP, including sequential neuroimaging, electrophysiology and metabolite profiles, and banked DNA for the purpose of future genomics studies, have the potential to provide new insights into the biological basis of focal epilepsy, which will advance our efforts to discover effective treatments and cures for this disorder.
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Inclusion criteria
Clinical seizure(s) and history consistent with focal epilepsy
At least two confirmed spontaneous seizures, at least 24 hours apart, in the 12 months prior to enrollment
Complete AED history prior to enrollment (with approximate dates and doses) is available (exception can be made for AEDs taken for <1 week)
Age ≥12 years and ≤60 years at time of seizure onset
Age ≥12 years and ≤60 years at time of enrollment
Treatment instituted not more than 4 months prior to enrollment
One of the following:
Exclusion criteria
Idiopathic or symptomatic generalized epilepsy
Any epilepsy etiology that could produce significant gliosis or brain injury and would be likely to alter biomarkers. These include:
Identified genetic epilepsy syndrome
Presence of moderate or greater developmental or cognitive delay prior to seizure onset (e.g., if an adolescent, not in self-contained classroom; if IQ is documented, should be > 70)
History of chronic drug or alcohol abuse within the last 2 years
IGE/focal epilepsy mixed syndromes
Progressive neurological disorder (brain tumor, AD, PME, etc.)
Major medical co-morbidities such as renal failure requiring dialysis, metastatic cancer, HIV, or significant liver or renal disease
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Seizures only during pregnancy
History of previous or current significant psychiatric disorder that would interfere with conduct of the study
488 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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