Liang, S., Zhang, J., Yang, Z. et al. Long-term outcomes of epilepsy surgery in
tuberous sclerosis complex J Neurol (2017) In press.
Abstract
Approximately 50% of patients with tuberous sclerosis
complex (TSC) present intractable epilepsy, and surgery is an option for those
patients. Hereby, we analyze long-term seizure control and neuropsychological
outcomes of epilepsy surgery in patients with TSC. Clinical data were
retrospectively collected from 66 patients with TSC and epilepsy followed up
over 5 years, 51 of whom underwent epilepsy surgery between 2001 and 2011.
Reductions in the number of seizures were analyzed at 1-year (1FU), 5-year
(5FU), and 10-year (10FU) follow-ups visits after the operation. Influential
factors on postoperative seizure free and intelligence quotient (IQ) and
quality-of-life (QOL) outcomes were evaluated at 5FU. Resective procedures
included 26 tuber resections, 15 lobectomies, and 10 tuber resections and
lobectomies. Corpus callosotomies were performed as the adjunctive approach in
11 cases with low IQ. The percentages of seizure-free cases were 74.5% at 1FU,
58.8% at 5FU, and 47.8% at 10FU, and the predictive factor for long-term
postoperative seizure freedom was the history of preoperative seizures and
preoperative full-scale IQ. Significant improvements were found in performance
IQ, full-scale IQ, and QOL in patients from the surgery group, particularly those
who were seizure free after the operation. Our study showed that epilepsy
surgery in TSC with epilepsy rendered improvements in seizure control,
full-scale IQ, and QOL. Satisfactory long-term seizure control was often
achieved with an early operation and without mental retardation, and
improvements in QOL and IQ were frequently observed in postoperative patients
who remained seizure free.
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