prognosis
Last reviewed 05/2021
In general the prognosis is poor.
- poor development is likely to be seen in IS associated with underlying genetic and structural brain issues, regardless of treatment
- normal or near normal development is present in only 15-25%
- epilepsy is present in up to 50% of patients
- autism is present in 15-33% of patients with infantile spasms and as high as 70% patients with tuberous sclerosis and infantile spasms
Aetiology is considered to be the most important predictor of outcome. Better development outcomes are observed in:
- patients without an identified etiology (cryptogenic/idiopathic)
- those treated with hormonal therapy rather than vigabatrin
- short treatment lag (<1 month) especially among cryptogenic patients
Normal or near normal outcomes are seen in 54.3% of the cases with cryptogenic IS while only 12.5% of symptomatic patients have a good outcome
Mortality of the condition:
- may be as high as 10% at 3 years of age
- 19% at age 10 years (1).
Reference: