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Outcome of Epilepsy Surgery in MRI-Negative Patients Without Histopathologic Abnormalities in the Resected Tissue.

Authors :
Sanders MW
Van der Wolf I
Jansen FE
Aronica E
Helmstaedter C
Racz A
Surges R
Grote A
Becker AJ
Rheims S
Catenoix H
Duncan JS
De Tisi J
Jacques TS
Cross JH
Kalviainen R
Rauramaa T
Chassoux F
Devaux BC
Di Gennaro G
Esposito V
Bodi I
Honavar M
Bien CG
Cloppenborg T
Coras R
Hamer HM
Marusic P
Kalina A
Pieper T
Kudernatsch M
Hartlieb TS
Von Oertzen TJ
Aichholzer M
Dorfmuller G
Chipaux M
Noachtar S
Kaufmann E
Schulze-Bonhage A
Scheiwe CF
Özkara C
Grunwald T
Koenig K
Guerrini R
Barba C
Buccoliero AM
Giordano F
Rosenow F
Menzler K
Garbelli R
Deleo F
Krsek P
Straka B
Arzimanoglou AA
Toulouse J
Van Paesschen W
Theys T
Pimentel J
Loução De Amorim IM
Specchio N
De Palma L
Feucht M
Scholl T
Roessler K
Toledano Delgado R
Gil-Nagel A
Raicevic S
Ristic AJ
Schijns O
Beckervordersandforth J
San Antonio-Arce V
Rumia J
Blumcke I
Braun KP
Source :
Neurology [Neurology] 2024 Feb 27; Vol. 102 (4), pp. e208007. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jan 30.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background and Objective: Patients with presumed nonlesional focal epilepsy-based on either MRI or histopathologic findings-have a lower success rate of epilepsy surgery compared with lesional patients. In this study, we aimed to characterize a large group of patients with focal epilepsy who underwent epilepsy surgery despite a normal MRI and had no lesion on histopathology. Determinants of their postoperative seizure outcomes were further studied.<br />Methods: We designed an observational multicenter cohort study of MRI-negative and histopathology-negative patients who were derived from the European Epilepsy Brain Bank and underwent epilepsy surgery between 2000 and 2012 in 34 epilepsy surgery centers within Europe. We collected data on clinical characteristics, presurgical assessment, including genetic testing, surgery characteristics, postoperative outcome, and treatment regimen.<br />Results: Of the 217 included patients, 40% were seizure-free (Engel I) 2 years after surgery and one-third of patients remained seizure-free after 5 years. Temporal lobe surgery (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]: 2.62; 95% CI 1.19-5.76), shorter epilepsy duration (AOR for duration: 0.94; 95% CI 0.89-0.99), and completely normal histopathologic findings-versus nonspecific reactive gliosis-(AOR: 4.69; 95% CI 1.79-11.27) were significantly associated with favorable seizure outcome at 2 years after surgery. Of patients who underwent invasive monitoring, only 35% reached seizure freedom at 2 years. Patients with parietal lobe resections had lowest seizure freedom rates (12.5%). Among temporal lobe surgery patients, there was a trend toward favorable outcome if hippocampectomy was part of the resection strategy (OR: 2.94; 95% CI 0.98-8.80). Genetic testing was only sporadically performed.<br />Discussion: This study shows that seizure freedom can be reached in 40% of nonlesional patients with both normal MRI and histopathology findings. In particular, nonlesional temporal lobe epilepsy should be regarded as a relatively favorable group, with almost half of patients achieving seizure freedom at 2 years after surgery-even more if the hippocampus is resected-compared with only 1 in 5 nonlesional patients who underwent extratemporal surgery. Patients with an electroclinically identified focus, who are nonlesional, will be a promising group for advanced molecular-genetic analysis of brain tissue specimens to identify new brain somatic epilepsy genes or epilepsy-associated molecular pathways.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1526-632X
Volume :
102
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38290094
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000208007