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Should spikes on post-resection ECoG guide pediatric epilepsy surgery?

Authors :
Greiner, Hansel M.
Horn, Paul S.
Tenney, Jeffrey R.
Arya, Ravindra
Jain, Sejal V.
Holland, Katherine D.
Leach, James L.
Miles, Lili
Rose, Douglas F.
Fujiwara, Hisako
Mangano, Francesco T.
Source :
Epilepsy Research. May2016, Vol. 122, p73-78. 6p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Purpose There is wide variation in clinical practice regarding the role of electrocorticography immediately after resection (post-resection ECoG) for pediatric epilepsy surgery. Results can guide further resection of potentially epileptogenic tissue. We hypothesized that post-resection ECoG spiking represents a biomarker of the epileptogenic zone and predicts seizure outcome in children undergoing epilepsy surgery. Methods We retrospectively identified 124 children with post-resection ECoG performed on the margins of resection. ECoG records were scored in a blinded fashion based on presence of frequent spiking. For patients identified as having additional resection based on clinical post-resection ECoG interpretation, these “second-look” ECoG results were re-reviewed for ongoing discharges or completeness of resection. Frequent spike populations were grouped using a standard scoring system into three ranges: 0.1–0.5 Hz, 0.5–1 Hz, >1 Hz. Seizure outcomes were determined at minimum 12-month followup. Results Of 124 patients who met inclusion criteria, 60 (48%) had an identified spike population on post-resection ECoG. Thirty (50%) of these had further resection based on clinical interpretation. Overall, good outcome (ILAE 1) was seen in 56/124 (45%). Completeness of resection of spiking (absence of spiking on initial post-resection ECoG or resolution of spiking after further resection) showed a trend toward good outcome (OR 2.03, p = 0.099). Patients with completeness of resection had good outcome in 41/80 (51%) of cases; patients with continued spikes had good outcome in 15/44 (35%) of cases. Conclusions Post-resection ECoG identifies residual epileptogenic tissue in a significant number of children. Lower frequency or absence of discharges on initial recording showed a trend toward good outcome. Completeness of resection demonstrated on final ECoG recording did not show a significant difference in outcome. This suggests that post-resection discharges represent a prognostic marker rather than a remediable biomarker of the epileptogenic zone in all patients. Resecting residual spike-generating cortex may be beneficial in selected patients, including children with tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09201211
Volume :
122
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Epilepsy Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
114313036
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eplepsyres.2016.02.011