“…Attention involves several different components and partially overlap with executive functions; previous studies showed that children with epilepsy exhibit a wide range of attention difficulties (D'Alessandro et al, 1990;Gascoigne et al, 2017;Semrud-Clikeman & Wical, 1999) and a high percentage of inattentivetype ADHD (Dunn & Kronenberger, 2005;Gascoigne et al, 2017). However, a cross-sectional design (e.g., Cnaan et al, 2017;D'Alessandro et al, 1990;Deonna et al, 2000;Fonseca Wald et al, 2019;Masur et al, 2013;Shinnar et al, 2017), short follow-up periods and a lack of proper age bias correction (Cnaan et al, 2017;Glauser et al, 2010;Masur et al, 2013;Shinnar et al, 2017) are significant limitations of these studies, making further confirmation necessary. In this regard, our paper based on well-defined eligibility criteria, comparable protocols, and an extended follow-up -confirmed this observation, showing a high percentage of attention deficits without significant differences in frequency between the three groups of examined patients in our cohort.…”