🎓 Expert Commentary / Peer Perspective
A JAMA Neurology cohort study mapped incident epilepsy across 692 aggregated US county regions, revealing incidence rates ranging from 141 to 1,476 per 100,000 and clustering in the American South. A peer commentary reframes late-onset epilepsy (LOE) as a cumulative expression of social, environmental, and structural vulnerability rather than purely biological pathology.
Clinical Considerations
- Regions in the highest tertile for insufficient sleep had nearly double the odds of high LOE incidence (OR, 1.99; 95% CI, 1.10–3.60); chronic sleep deprivation is a recognized modulator of neuronal excitability
- Lack of household vehicle access was similarly associated with elevated incidence (OR, 1.93; 95% CI, 1.16–3.25), reflecting compounded barriers to diagnosis, medication access, and comorbidity management
- Heat index, uninsured rate, physical inactivity, and obesity emerged as additional high-importance predictors in random forest models
- Ecological design limits individual-level inference; administrative coding introduces misclassification risk, particularly in underserved populations
Practice Applications
- Recognize sleep deprivation and vascular comorbidity burden as upstream, potentially modifiable contributors to LOE risk in aging patients
- Integrate social determinants screening when evaluating new-onset seizures in older adults, particularly those with transportation or insurance barriers
- Avoid interpreting area-level associations as individual causal pathways; findings are hypothesis-generating for prevention research, not practice-directive
- Monitor emerging literature on climate-related neurological vulnerability, including heat as a seizure threshold modifier
PATIENT EDUCATION
OBESITY/WEIGHT MANAGEMENT
EXERCISE/TRAINING
LEGAL MATTERS
GUIDELINES/RECOMMENDATIONS