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Incidence of fractures among epilepsy patients: a population-based retrospective cohort study in the General Practice Research Database

Incidence of fractures among epilepsy patients: a population-based retrospective cohort study in the General Practice Research Database
Incidence of fractures among epilepsy patients: a population-based retrospective cohort study in the General Practice Research Database
Summary: Purpose: To compare the incidence of various fractures in a cohort of patients with epilepsy with a reference cohort of patients not having epilepsy.
Methods: Patients were included in the epilepsy cohort if they had at least one diagnosis of epilepsy in their medical history and had sufficient evidence of "active" epilepsy (use of antiepileptic drugs, diagnoses) after the practice was included in the General Practice Research Database (GPRD). Two reference patients were sampled for each patient with epilepsy from the same practice. Primary outcome was the occurrence of any fracture during follow-up. Poisson regression analysis was used to estimate incidence density ratios (IDRs).
Results: The study population comprised 40,485 and 80,970 patients in the epilepsy and reference cohorts, respectively. The median duration of follow-up was 3 years. The overall incidence rate in the epilepsy cohort was 241.9 per 10,000 person-years. This rate was about twice as high as that in reference cohort: age- and sex-adjusted IDR, 1.89 (95% CI, 1.81–1.98). When comparing IDRs among the different groups of fractures, the highest relative-risk estimate was found for hip and femur fractures (adjusted IDR, 2.79; 95% CI, 2.41–3.24). IDRs were consistently elevated across age and sex groups and across fracture subtypes.
Conclusions: The overall risk of fractures was nearly twice as high among patients with epilepsy compared with the general population. The relative fracture risk was highest for hip and femur. Further study is necessary to elucidate whether this elevated risk is due to the disease, the use of antiepileptic drugs, or both.
0013-9580
304-310
Souverein, P.C.
44dfc72c-9a33-4ab8-bce5-574052a8dc18
Webb, D.J.
6fc412d4-f113-4e55-9e3a-dad18223a445
Petri, H.
b6711e41-d14a-4a8e-ad56-68ba9be37bcc
Weil, J.
056f3d7e-ae3a-427a-8ff0-78e563e86d17
Van Staa, T.P.
31b8bfb4-4e1b-4a48-a5a6-90ca601b94af
Egberts, T.
95cfe84d-130c-4a51-a2bb-fa5295abefc0
Souverein, P.C.
44dfc72c-9a33-4ab8-bce5-574052a8dc18
Webb, D.J.
6fc412d4-f113-4e55-9e3a-dad18223a445
Petri, H.
b6711e41-d14a-4a8e-ad56-68ba9be37bcc
Weil, J.
056f3d7e-ae3a-427a-8ff0-78e563e86d17
Van Staa, T.P.
31b8bfb4-4e1b-4a48-a5a6-90ca601b94af
Egberts, T.
95cfe84d-130c-4a51-a2bb-fa5295abefc0

Souverein, P.C., Webb, D.J., Petri, H., Weil, J., Van Staa, T.P. and Egberts, T. (2005) Incidence of fractures among epilepsy patients: a population-based retrospective cohort study in the General Practice Research Database. Epilepsia, 46 (2), 304-310. (doi:10.1111/j.0013-9580.2005.23804.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Summary: Purpose: To compare the incidence of various fractures in a cohort of patients with epilepsy with a reference cohort of patients not having epilepsy.
Methods: Patients were included in the epilepsy cohort if they had at least one diagnosis of epilepsy in their medical history and had sufficient evidence of "active" epilepsy (use of antiepileptic drugs, diagnoses) after the practice was included in the General Practice Research Database (GPRD). Two reference patients were sampled for each patient with epilepsy from the same practice. Primary outcome was the occurrence of any fracture during follow-up. Poisson regression analysis was used to estimate incidence density ratios (IDRs).
Results: The study population comprised 40,485 and 80,970 patients in the epilepsy and reference cohorts, respectively. The median duration of follow-up was 3 years. The overall incidence rate in the epilepsy cohort was 241.9 per 10,000 person-years. This rate was about twice as high as that in reference cohort: age- and sex-adjusted IDR, 1.89 (95% CI, 1.81–1.98). When comparing IDRs among the different groups of fractures, the highest relative-risk estimate was found for hip and femur fractures (adjusted IDR, 2.79; 95% CI, 2.41–3.24). IDRs were consistently elevated across age and sex groups and across fracture subtypes.
Conclusions: The overall risk of fractures was nearly twice as high among patients with epilepsy compared with the general population. The relative fracture risk was highest for hip and femur. Further study is necessary to elucidate whether this elevated risk is due to the disease, the use of antiepileptic drugs, or both.

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Published date: 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25993
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25993
ISSN: 0013-9580
PURE UUID: 71a4261c-6e53-4f75-867d-3b747a7bab0c

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Date deposited: 11 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:07

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Contributors

Author: P.C. Souverein
Author: D.J. Webb
Author: H. Petri
Author: J. Weil
Author: T.P. Van Staa
Author: T. Egberts

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