Long-term outcome of lesional posterior cortical epilepsy surgery in adults
- A E Elsharkawy1,2,
- N M F El-Ghandour2,
- F Oppel3,
- H Pannek3,
- R Schulz1,
- M Hoppe1,
- F G Woermann4,
- M Nayel2,
- A Issa2,
- A Ebner1
- 1Department of Presurgical Evaluation, Bethel Epilepsy Centre, Bielefeld, Germany
- 2Neurosurgical Department, Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt
- 3Neurosurgical Department, Bethel Epilepsy Centre, Bielefeld, Germany
- 4MRI Unit, Bethel Epilepsy Centre, Bielefeld, Germany
- Dr A Ebner, Klinik Mara, Maraweg 21, 33617 Bielefeld, Germany; alois.ebner{at}mara.de
- Received 29 September 2008
- Revised 1 January 2009
- Accepted 9 January 2009
- Published Online First 25 March 2009
Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the short- and long-term seizure outcome and to find predictors of outcome after epilepsy surgery in lesional posterior cortical epilepsies (PCEs).
Methods: The operative outcome in 80 consecutive adult patients with lesional PCEs who underwent resective surgery for intractable partial epilepsy between 1991 and 2006 was retrospectively studied.
Results: The probability of remaining in Engel Class I was 66.3% (95% CI 60 to 72) at 6 months, 52.5% (95% CI 47 to 57) at 2 years, 52.9% (CI 45 to 59) at 5 years and 47.1% (CI 42 to 52) at 10 years. Factors predicting poor outcome were the presence of a somatosensory aura, extraregional spikes, incomplete resection, interictal epileptiform discharge (IED) in EEG 6 months and 2 years postsurgery, history of generalised tonic-clonic seizure (GT-CS) and the presence of focal cortical dysplasia in the resected specimen. Factors predicting good outcome were childhood onset of epilepsy, short epilepsy duration, ipsilateral spikes, visual aura, presence of well-circumscribed lesion in preoperative MRI and a pathologically defined tumour. In the multivariate analysis, predictors were different in the long and short term as follows: incomplete resection as proven by postoperative MRI (hazard ratio (HR) 2.059 (CI 1.19 to 3.67)) predicts seizure relapse in short-term follow-up. The presence of IED in the EEG performed 6 months after surgery (HR 2.3 (CI 1.128 to 4.734)) predicts seizure relapse in the long-term fellow-up. However, the absence of a history of GT-CS independently predicts seizure remission in short- and long-term follow-up.
Conclusions: Surgery in PCEs proved to be effective in short- and long-term follow-up. Lesional posterior cortical epilepsy may be a progressive process in a substantial number of cases.
Footnotes
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Competing interests: None.
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Ethics approval: Provided by the Clinical Ethics Committee in the Bethel Epilepsy Centre.
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Patient consent: Obtained.









