ADVERTISEMENT

Feature Article

How Safe Is Prolonged Video-EEG Monitoring?
Evidence from a large retrospective cohort analysis indicates that video-EEG monitoring is a safe procedure with a low risk of complications.
2012;20(7):8

NEW ORLEANS—Prolonged video-EEG monitoring is a safe procedure with rare complications, according to results from a retrospective study that drew data from the National Inpatient Sample, the largest publicly available all-payer inpatient care database in the US.


At the 64th Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Neurology, Nancy E. Hammond, MD, reported that an examination of 19 years of medical records revealed that prolonged video-EEG was “quite safe and that rates of injuries and complications were lower than previously reported.” Dr. Hammond is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Neurology at the University of Kansas Hospital and Director of the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center in Kansas City.


Video-EEG monitoring is useful for the diagnosis and classification of epilepsy, diagnosis of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures, and for presurgical evaluation of patients for epilepsy surgery. “This is a unique procedure that carries with it some potential risks as we actually bring our patients into the hospital and try to induce them into having seizures,” Dr. Hammond said. “In theory, patients could suffer from status epilepticus, prolonged seizures, or injuries due to the seizures themselves. In addition, there have been several recent, well-publicized cases of death in video-EEG monitoring units, and that got me curious to see how big of a problem this really was.”


Safety Analysis From the National Inpatient Sample
When a review of the literature yielded only a few studies on the risks of video-EEG monitoring, Dr. Hammond and her coinvestigator, Richard Dubinsky, MD, turned to the National Inpatient Sample, which is a 20% stratified sample of all US acute hospital admissions (excluding federal hospitals). The database includes demographics, primary and secondary diagnoses, primary and secondary procedures, length of stay, hospital costs, and discharge disposition. This involves information on six to eight million hospital admissions per year. The researchers used this database to determine the frequency of injuries that occurred during video-EEG admissions.


Their retrospective cohort analysis encompassed 1990 to 2007. The investigators searched the database for the ICD-9 procedure code for video-EEG monitoring, then used the Clinical Classifications Software (CCS) for ICD-9-CM to redact diagnostic and procedure codes. Adverse events were identified using complication codes. To minimize nonstandard admissions and get a clearer picture of patients who were in the hospital primarily for video-EEG monitoring, the researchers excluded the top fifth and bottom fifth percentiles of age; patients who were admitted from the emergency room; records that were missing data on sex, length of stay, and other demographic information; records that came from small and rural hospitals; and patients who had a length of stay of more than 13 days.
 



ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Breaking News

More Headlines