4.7 Article

Seizure outcome and use of antiepileptic drugs after epilepsy surgery according to histopathological diagnosis: a retrospective multicentre cohort study

Journal

LANCET NEUROLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 9, Pages 748-757

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S1474-4422(20)30220-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Reference Network EpiCARE [769501]
  2. Epilepsiefonds [WAR 08-10]
  3. NWO [VEN1 016.168.038]
  4. EU [602531, 602102, 602391, 602130]
  5. Dedev-Wrobel-Fonds for Epilepsy Research
  6. Deutsche Forsch t in gsgemei nscha ft (German Research Council, Bonn, Germany)
  7. Cerd-Alteithobstiftung (Deutsches Stiftungs-Zentrunt Essen, Germany)
  8. BONFOR
  9. Novartis Stiltung fur therapeutische Forschung
  10. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [43499]
  11. Italian Ministry of Health [RE -2016-02362195, RE -20'10-2309954]
  12. Associazione Paolo Zorzi per le Neuroscienze
  13. Swedish Government
  14. ALF [ALFGBG-723151]
  15. Margarethahemmet foundation
  16. Swiss National Foundation [163398, 180365]
  17. National Institute for Health Research University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre
  18. Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity
  19. Brain Tumour Charity
  20. Children with Cancer
  21. Higher Education Funding Council for England
  22. National Institute for Health Research
  23. National Institute for Health Research University College London Great Ormond S treed Institute of Child Health Biomedical Research Centre
  24. Anniversary Fund of the Central Bank of the Republic of Austria [QM -12036]
  25. EundaciCii Culp
  26. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development, 7.oni\Mc Programma Translationeel Onderzoek [95105004]
  27. [NV19-04-00369]

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Background Surgery is a widely accepted treatment option for drug-resistant focal epilepsy. A detailed analysis of longitudinal postoperative seizure outcomes and use of antiepileptic drugs for different brain lesions causing epilepsy is not available. We aimed to analyse the association between histopathology and seizure outcome and drug freedom up to 5 years after epilepsy surgery, to improve presurgical decision making and counselling. Methods In this retrospective, multicentre, longitudinal, cohort study, patients who had epilepsy surgery between Jan 1, 2000, and Dec 31, 2012, at 37 collaborating tertiary referral centres across 18 European countries of the European Epilepsy Brain Bank consortium were assessed. We included patients of all ages with histopathology available after epilepsy surgery. Histopathological diagnoses and a minimal dataset of clinical variables were collected from existing local databases and patient records. The primary outcomes were freedom from disabling seizures (Engel class 1) and drug freedom at 1, 2, and 5 years after surgery. Proportions of individuals who were Engel class 1 and drug-free were reported for the 11 main categories of histopathological diagnosis. We analysed the association between histopathology, duration of epilepsy, and age at surgery, and the primary outcomes using random effects multivariable logistic regression to control for confounding. Findings 9147 patients were included, of whom seizure outcomes were available for 8191 (89.5%) participants at 2 years, and for 5577 (61.0%) at 5 years. The diagnoses of low-grade epilepsy associated neuroepithelial tumour (LEAT), vascular malformation, and hippocampal sclerosis had the best seizure outcome at 2 years after surgery, with 77.5% (1027 of 1325) of patients free from disabling seizures for LEAT, 74.0% (328 of 443) for vascular malformation, and 71.5% (2108 of 2948) for hippocampal sderosis. The worst seizure outcomes at 2 years were seen for patients with focal cortical dysplasia type I or mild malformation of cortical development (50.0%, 213 of 426 free from disabling seizures), those with malformation of cortical development-other (52.3%, 212 of 405 free from disabling seizures), and for those with no histopathological lesion (53.5%, 396 of 740 free from disabling seizures). The proportion of patients being both Engel class 1 and drug-free was 0-14% at 1 year and increased to 14-51% at 5 years. Children were more often drug-free; temporal lobe surgeries had the best seizure outcomes; and a longer duration of epilepsy was associated with reduced chance of favourable seizure outcomes and drug freedom. This effect of duration was evident for all lesions, except for hippocampal sclerosis. Interpretation Histopathological diagnosis, age at surgery, and duration of epilepsy are important prognostic factors for outcomes of epilepsy surgery. In every patient with refractory focal epilepsy presumed to be lesional, evaluation for surgery should be considered. Copyright (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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