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Psychosocial outcome in epilepsy after extratemporal surgery

Authors :
Michael Schwarz
Stefan Schwab
Karl Rössler
Wolfgang Graf
Hajo M. Hamer
Stephanie Gollwitzer
Johannes Lang
Katrin Walther
Burkhard S. Kasper
Hermann Stefan
Michael Buchfelder
Katrin Kurzbuch
Müjgan Dogan Onugoren
Peter Kriwy
Source :
Epilepsybehavior : EB. 81
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Objective Only limited data exist on psychosocial long-term outcome after epilepsy surgery in patients with extratemporal epilepsy. The aim of this study was to investigate psychosocial outcome after extratemporal epilepsy surgery and to assess factors predicting favorable outcome. Method Sixty-five out of 104 eligible patients who had undergone extratemporal epilepsy surgery at our epilepsy center between 1990 and 2015 (mean age: 42.2. years; 75% of the resections in the frontal lobe) completed a questionnaire asking about seizure status, employment status, marital and living situation, driving status, depressive symptoms, and quality of life (QOL). Follow-up was on average 9.2 years after surgery (range: 1–26 years). Results Thirty-eight (58%) patients were free of disabling seizures (Engel class I), and 28 (43%) have not experienced any seizures after surgery (Engel class IA). Employment rate in the primary labor market remained at 45%, but more patients lost employment (14%) than gained employment (8%). Postoperative employment was predicted by preoperative employment (p = .007), seizure freedom (p = .025), older age at seizure onset (p = .018), younger age at follow-up (p = .035), and female gender (p = .048). Seizure-free patients were more likely to be driving; have a partner, particularly in males; and have lower depressive scores. Quality of life at follow-up was best predicted by employment (p = .012), partnership (p = .025), and seizure freedom (p = .025). In contrast, recurrence of seizures and early seizure onset were associated with poor psychosocial outcome, particularly in men. Conclusion The study provides support that extratemporal surgery can lead to improved QOL and favorable psychosocial outcome. Seizure freedom is important but not the only determinant of good psychosocial outcome.

Details

ISSN :
15255069
Volume :
81
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Epilepsybehavior : EB
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....32ba2dec5ad799f826b701d6af9c470b