1. Impact of seizure onset zone and intracranial electroencephalography ictal characteristics on epilepsy surgery outcomes in tuberous sclerosis complex.
- Author
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Miecznikowski KB, Leach J, Rozhkov L, Mangano FT, Skoch J, Krueger DA, Horn PS, and Greiner HM
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Retrospective Studies, Child, Preschool, Treatment Outcome, Adolescent, Electroencephalography methods, Drug Resistant Epilepsy surgery, Drug Resistant Epilepsy physiopathology, Infant, Epilepsy surgery, Epilepsy physiopathology, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Young Adult, Brain surgery, Brain physiopathology, Follow-Up Studies, Tuberous Sclerosis surgery, Tuberous Sclerosis complications, Tuberous Sclerosis physiopathology, Seizures surgery, Seizures physiopathology, Electrocorticography methods
- Abstract
Ninety percent of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) patients have seizures, with ∼50 % developing drug refractory epilepsy. Surgical intervention aims to remove the seizure onset zone (SOZ). This retrospective study investigated the relationship of SOZ size, ictal pattern, and extent of resection with surgical outcomes. TSC patients undergoing resective/ablative surgery with >1-year follow-up and adequate imaging were included. Preoperative iEEG data were reviewed to determine ictal pattern and SOZ location. For outcomes, an ILAE score of 1-3 was defined as good and 4-6 as poor. Forty-four patients were included (age 117.4 ± 110.8 months). Of these, 59.1 % achieved a good outcome, while 40.9 % had a poor outcome. Size of SOZ was a significant factor (p = 0.009), with the poor outcome group having a larger SOZ (11.9 ± 6.7 electrode contacts) than the good outcome group (7.3 ± 7.2). SOZ number was significant (p = 0.020); >1 SOZ was associated with poor outcome. These results demonstrate extent of SOZ as a predictor of seizure freedom following epilepsy surgery in a mostly pediatric TSC cohort. We hypothesize that these features represent biomarkers of focality of the epileptogenic zone and can be used to sharpen prognosis for epilepsy surgery outcomes in this cohort., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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