Results and recommendations: Adults with an unprovoked first seizure should be informed that
their seizure recurrence risk is greatest early within the first 2 years (21%–45%) (Level A), and
clinical variables associated with increased risk may include a prior brain insult (Level A), an EEG
with epileptiform abnormalities (Level A), a significant brain-imaging abnormality (Level B), and a
nocturnal seizure (Level B). Immediate antiepileptic drug (AED) therapy, as compared with delay of
treatment pending a second seizure, is likely to reduce recurrence risk within the first 2 years
(Level B) but may not improve quality of life (Level C). Over a longer term (.3 years), immediate
AED treatment is unlikely to improve prognosis as measured by sustained seizure remission
(Level B). Patients should be advised that risk of AED adverse events (AEs) may range from
7% to 31% (Level B) and that these AEs are likely predominantly mild and reversible. Clinicians’
recommendations whether to initiate immediate AED treatment after a first seizure should be
based on individualized assessments that weigh the risk of recurrence against the AEs of AED
therapy, consider educated patient preferences, and advise that immediate treatment will not
improve the long-term prognosis for seizure remission but will reduce seizure risk over the subsequent
2 years.
Neurology 2015
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