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Change of Patient Selection Strategy and Improved Surgical Outcome in MRI-negative Neocortical Epilepsy

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Journal J Epilepsy Res
Date 2017 Jan 20
PMID 28101477
Citations 2
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Abstract

Background And Purpose: It is crucial to make selection strategy to identify surgical candidates among medically refractory MRI-negative neocortical epilepsy patients. In our previous study, we suggested two or more concordance between noninvasive studies (EEG, ictal scalp EEG, interictal FDG-PET, and SPECT) as a new patient selection strategy for MRI-negative neocortical epilepsy surgery. The objective of this study was to evaluate the surgical outcomes of MRI-negative neocortical epilepsy patients before and after the implementation of a new selection strategy.

Methods: From 1995 to 2011, we included 153 consecutive MRI-negative neocortical epilepsy patients who received focal resection and had a follow-up period of at least 2 years. These patients were divided into two groups according to their date of surgery (before and after July 2002). The old group consisted of 89 patients and the new one consisted of 53 patients. Clinical characteristics, presurgical evaluations, and pathology were reviewed.

Results: The new patient selection strategy led to a significant increase in the concordance between two or more modalities. The improvement in surgical outcome after 2002 was significant (seizure-free outcome, 47.2% vs. 75.5%; = 0.001). Concordance between two or more presurgical evaluations and localizing PET were related to a seizure-free outcome in a multivariate analysis.

Conclusions: After a change in surgical strategy to select patients with two or more concordance between noninvasive studies, the seizure-free outcome improved up to 75.5%. MRI-negative neocortical epilepsy patients with two or more concordance between noninvasive studies seem to be good candidates for epilepsy surgery.

Citing Articles

Who are the Better Candidates for Epilepsy Surgery?.

Lee S J Epilepsy Res. 2024; 13(2):37-41.

PMID: 38223357 PMC: 10783962. DOI: 10.14581/jer.23006.


PET and ictal SPECT can be helpful for localizing epileptic foci.

von Oertzen T Curr Opin Neurol. 2018; 31(2):184-191.

PMID: 29303866 PMC: 5895139. DOI: 10.1097/WCO.0000000000000527.

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