Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3039584 | Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2016 | 8 Pages |
•We studied a large cohort of “Long-term epilepsy associated tumors (LEATs).”•105 patients with LEATs underwent surgery in our center.•At 7.5 years follow-up, 74% were seizure-free and 57% were drug-free.•Secondary generalized seizures before surgery predicts a poor seizure outcome.•Early excision of LEATs should be advocated.
Objectives“Long-term epilepsy associated tumors (LEATs)” by definition are tumors primarily causing drug-resistant seizures for two years or more. They include low-grade glial and glioneuronal tumors with normal life expectancy. We studied a large cohort of patients with LEATs who underwent surgery through our epilepsy program.Patients & methodsFrom 1998–2011, 105 patients with LEATs underwent surgery in our center. We utilized their data archived in a prospective registry to evaluate their electro-clinical-imaging characteristics affecting the long-term seizure outcome.ResultsOf 105 patients (age 3–50 years), mean age at surgery was 20 years and mean pre-surgical duration of epilepsy was 10.9 years. 66 (62.8%) had secondary generalized seizures. 82 had temporal tumors, 23 had extra temporal (13 frontal, 3 parietal, 2 occipital and 5 multilobar lesions) and four had associated hippocampal sclerosis. The interictal discharges and ictal onset were concordant to the lesion in 82 (78%) and 98 (93%) patients respectively. Lesionectomy and/or adjoining corticectomy or temporal lobectomy was done. Ganglioglioma was the most dominant pathological substrate in 61 (58%). During a mean follow-up of 7.5 years (range 3–16 years), 78/105 (74.2%) were seizure-free and 45 (57.4%) were totally off drugs. Secondary generalized seizures (p-0.02), temporal location of tumor (p-0.008) and spikes in third month post-operative EEG (p-0.03) caused unfavorable seizure outcome. A pre-surgical duration of epilepsy of more than 6.6 years caused less than optimal surgical outcomeConclusionsEarly surgery should be considered a priority in LEATs. Presence of secondary generalized seizures is the single most important predictor of a poor seizure outcome.