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Pseudotumor cerebri syndrome in childhood: incidence, clinical profile and risk factors in a national prospective population-based cohort study

Pseudotumor cerebri syndrome in childhood: incidence, clinical profile and risk factors in a national prospective population-based cohort study
Pseudotumor cerebri syndrome in childhood: incidence, clinical profile and risk factors in a national prospective population-based cohort study
Aim: To investigate the epidemiology, clinical profile and risk factors of pseudotumor cerebri syndrome (PTCS) in children aged 1–16 years.
Methods: A national prospective population-based cohort study over 25 months. Newly diagnosed PTCS cases notified via British Paediatric Surveillance Unit were ascertained using classical diagnostic criteria and categorised according to 2013 revised diagnostic criteria. We derived national age, sex and weight-specific annual incidence rates and assessed effects of sex and weight categories.
Results: We identified 185 PTCS cases of which 166 also fulfilled revised diagnostic criteria. The national annual incidence (95% CI) of PTCS in children aged 1–16 years was 0.71 (0.57 to 0.87) per 100 000 population increasing with age and weight to 4.18 and 10.7 per 100 000 in obese boys and girls aged 12–15 years, respectively. Incidence rates under 7 years were similar in both sexes. From 7 years onwards, the incidence in girls was double that in boys, but only in overweight (including obese) children. In children aged 12–15 years, an estimated 82% of the incidence of PTCS was attributable to obesity. Two subgroups of PTCS were apparent: 168 (91%) cases aged from 7 years frequently presented on medication and with headache and were predominantly female and obese. The remaining 17 (9%) cases under 7 years often lacked these risk factors and commonly presented with paralytic squint.
Conclusions: This uniquely large population-based study of childhood PTCS will inform the design of future intervention studies. It suggests that weight reduction is central to the prevention of PTCS.
0003-9888
715-721
Matthews, Yim-Yee
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Dean, Fiona
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Lim, Ming J.
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Mclachlan, Karen
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Rigby, Alan S.
5e99bc17-6d8a-4ac6-9a3c-7266119c185f
Solanki, Guirish A.
7c576448-bbda-4d9b-985e-07d96c260d39
White, Catharine P.
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Whitehouse, William P.
5cede507-72cf-41cd-963d-1b7cce61fed5
Kennedy, Colin R.
7c3aff62-0a86-4b44-b7d7-4bc01f23ec93
Matthews, Yim-Yee
083c5624-0df7-4d34-8063-2a00bbd3a6fd
Dean, Fiona
ee4b7abb-073d-46f3-8c2d-a8168c71c4e3
Lim, Ming J.
d81771dc-9c5e-4cdb-a87a-3cd4a410368a
Mclachlan, Karen
a44056a3-20bf-47bf-86b5-73392204004c
Rigby, Alan S.
5e99bc17-6d8a-4ac6-9a3c-7266119c185f
Solanki, Guirish A.
7c576448-bbda-4d9b-985e-07d96c260d39
White, Catharine P.
46a61c62-bf60-4c7f-b4a5-87b09ded75b5
Whitehouse, William P.
5cede507-72cf-41cd-963d-1b7cce61fed5
Kennedy, Colin R.
7c3aff62-0a86-4b44-b7d7-4bc01f23ec93

Matthews, Yim-Yee, Dean, Fiona, Lim, Ming J., Mclachlan, Karen, Rigby, Alan S., Solanki, Guirish A., White, Catharine P., Whitehouse, William P. and Kennedy, Colin R. (2017) Pseudotumor cerebri syndrome in childhood: incidence, clinical profile and risk factors in a national prospective population-based cohort study. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 102 (8), 715-721. (doi:10.1136/archdischild-2016-312238).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aim: To investigate the epidemiology, clinical profile and risk factors of pseudotumor cerebri syndrome (PTCS) in children aged 1–16 years.
Methods: A national prospective population-based cohort study over 25 months. Newly diagnosed PTCS cases notified via British Paediatric Surveillance Unit were ascertained using classical diagnostic criteria and categorised according to 2013 revised diagnostic criteria. We derived national age, sex and weight-specific annual incidence rates and assessed effects of sex and weight categories.
Results: We identified 185 PTCS cases of which 166 also fulfilled revised diagnostic criteria. The national annual incidence (95% CI) of PTCS in children aged 1–16 years was 0.71 (0.57 to 0.87) per 100 000 population increasing with age and weight to 4.18 and 10.7 per 100 000 in obese boys and girls aged 12–15 years, respectively. Incidence rates under 7 years were similar in both sexes. From 7 years onwards, the incidence in girls was double that in boys, but only in overweight (including obese) children. In children aged 12–15 years, an estimated 82% of the incidence of PTCS was attributable to obesity. Two subgroups of PTCS were apparent: 168 (91%) cases aged from 7 years frequently presented on medication and with headache and were predominantly female and obese. The remaining 17 (9%) cases under 7 years often lacked these risk factors and commonly presented with paralytic squint.
Conclusions: This uniquely large population-based study of childhood PTCS will inform the design of future intervention studies. It suggests that weight reduction is central to the prevention of PTCS.

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Matthews et al ADC Jan 2017 revised clean - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 December 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 29 March 2017
Published date: August 2017
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 406150
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406150
ISSN: 0003-9888
PURE UUID: d2bcaba3-c0a5-4aba-b5a7-c1531ce1462f

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2017 10:40
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:07

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Contributors

Author: Yim-Yee Matthews
Author: Fiona Dean
Author: Ming J. Lim
Author: Karen Mclachlan
Author: Alan S. Rigby
Author: Guirish A. Solanki
Author: Catharine P. White
Author: William P. Whitehouse

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