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Determinants of Functional Outcome after Pediatric Hemispherotomy.

Authors :
Ramantani, Georgia
Cserpan, Dorottya
Tisdall, Martin
Otte, Willem M.
Dorfmüller, Georg
Cross, J. Helen
van Schooneveld, Monique
van Eijsden, Pieter
Nees, Frauke
Reuner, Gitta
Krayenbühl, Niklaus
Zentner, Josef
Bulteau, Christine
Braun, Kees P. J.
Source :
Annals of Neurology. Feb2024, Vol. 95 Issue 2, p377-387. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: We aimed to evaluate determinants of functional outcome after pediatric hemispherotomy in a large and recent multicenter cohort. Methods: We retrospectively investigated the functional outcomes of 455 children who underwent hemispherotomy at 5 epilepsy centers in 2000–2016. We identified determinants of unaided walking, voluntary grasping with the hemiplegic hand, and speaking through Bayesian multivariable regression modeling using missing data imputation. Results: Seventy‐five percent of children were seizure‐free, and 44% stopped antiseizure medication at a 5.1‐year mean follow‐up (range = 1–17.1). Seventy‐seven percent of children could walk unaided, 8% could grasp voluntarily, and 68% could speak at the last follow‐up. Children were unlikely to walk when they had contralateral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities (40/73, p = 0.04), recurrent seizures following hemispherotomy (62/109, p = 0.04), and moderately (50/61, p = 0.03) or severely impaired (127/199, p = 0.001) postsurgical intellectual functioning, but were likely to walk when they were older at outcome determination (p = 0.01). Children were unlikely to grasp voluntarily with the hand contralateral to surgery when they had Rasmussen encephalitis (0/61, p = 0.001) or Sturge–Weber syndrome (0/32, p = 0.007). Children were unlikely to speak when they had contralateral MRI abnormalities (30/69, p = 0.002) and longer epilepsy duration (p = 0.01), but likely to speak when they had Sturge–Weber syndrome (29/35, p = 0.01), were older at surgery (p = 0.04), and were older at outcome determination (p < 0.001). Interpretation: Etiology and bilaterality of structural brain abnormalities were key determinants of functional outcome after hemispherotomy. Longer epilepsy duration affected language outcomes. Not surprisingly, walking and talking ability increased with older age at outcome evaluation. ANN NEUROL 2024;95:377–387 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03645134
Volume :
95
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Annals of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175054866
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.26830