Early seizure spread and epilepsy surgery
Abstract number :
149
Submission category :
9. Surgery / 9A. Adult
Year :
2020
Submission ID :
2422497
Source :
www.aesnet.org
Presentation date :
12/5/2020 9:07:12 AM
Published date :
Nov 21, 2020, 02:24 AM
Authors :
John Andrews, University of California-San Francisco; Simon Ammanuel - University of California-San Francisco; Jonathan Kleen - University of California, San Francisco; Ankit Khambhati - University of California, San Francisco; Robert Knowlton - Universit
Rationale:
A fundamental question in epilepsy surgery is how to delineate the margins of cortex that must be resected to result in seizure freedom. Whether and which areas showing seizure activity early in ictus must be removed to avoid post-operative recurrence of seizures is an area of ongoing research. While seizure spread dynamics in the initial seconds of ictus are often correlated with postoperative outcome, there is no consensus definition of early spread, nor is there a concise summary of the existing literature linking seizure spread to post-surgical seizure outcomes. The present study is intended to summarize the literature linking seizure spread to postoperative seizure outcome and provide a framework for quantitative assessment of early seizure spread.
Method:
A systematic review was carried out according to PRISMA guidelines. A Medline search identified clinical studies reporting data on seizure spread measured by intracranial electrodes, having at least 10 subjects and reporting at least 1-year postoperative outcome in the English literature from 1990 to 2019. Studies were evaluated regarding support for a primary hypothesis: Areas of early seizure spread represent cortex with seizure-generating potential.
Results:
The search yielded 4562 studies. 15 studies met inclusion criteria. 7 studies supported the primary hypothesis. The methods and metrics used to describe seizure spread were heterogenous. The timeframe of seizure spread associated with seizure outcome ranged from 1 – 14 seconds, with large, well-designed, retrospective studies pointing to 3 – 10 seconds as most likely to provide meaningful correlates of postoperative seizure freedom.
Conclusion:
The complex correlation between electrophysiologic seizure spread and the potential for seizure generation needs further elucidation. Prospective cohort studies or trials are needed to evaluate epilepsy surgery targeting cortex involved in the first 3-10 seconds of ictus.
Funding:
:None
Surgery