Epilepsy surgery for pediatric patients with mild malformation of cortical development

•Pediatric mMCD presents with more severe forms of epilepsy than adults who undergo temporal resection.•Pediatric mMCD is an important pathological finding with a significant degree of epileptogenicity.•Epilepsy surgery can improve outcomes despite an unstable postoperative seizure control pattern....

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Veröffentlicht in:Seizure (London, England) England), 2020-11, Vol.82, p.50-55
Hauptverfasser: Kwon, Hye Eun, Kim, Se Hoon, Kang, Hoon-Chul, Lee, Joon Soo, Kim, Heung Dong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Pediatric mMCD presents with more severe forms of epilepsy than adults who undergo temporal resection.•Pediatric mMCD is an important pathological finding with a significant degree of epileptogenicity.•Epilepsy surgery can improve outcomes despite an unstable postoperative seizure control pattern. The observation of mild malformation of cortical development (mMCD) has yet to have a major clinical impact due to the lack of clinical and research data. We characterized the clinical features, surgical outcomes, and postoperative seizure control patterns in pediatric patients with mMCD. We examined 40 patients with isolated mMCD who underwent resective surgery during a 10-year period. The median age at seizure onset was 1.2 years, and the median age at surgery was 7.9 years. Twenty-seven patients (67.5%) presented with childhood-onset epileptic encephalopathy (21 Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, 6 West syndrome), and 13 patients (32.5%) presented with intractable focal epilepsy (10 extratemporal lesions, 3 temporal lesions). Twenty-one patients (52.5%) showed “suspected focal cortical malformation” on MRI, whereas 16 patients (40.0%) and 3 patients (7.5%) showed normal MRI findings or mild brain atrophy, respectively. The most common surgical procedures were two lobar resections (18 patients, 45.0%), followed by unilobar resections (12 patients, 30.0%) and resections exceeding two lobar boundaries (10 patients, 25.0%). As a final surgical outcome, 24 patients (60.0%) were ILAE Class 1−3. Discontinuation of all AEDs was possible for 36.8% of ILAE Class 1 patients. Regarding the seizure control pattern, fluctuating seizure control was observed most frequently (21 patients, 52.5%). Our results suggest that mMCD is an important pathological finding in children related to a significant degree of epileptogenicity, and resective surgery can have positive outcomes. However, these patients showed unstable postoperative seizure control patterns with a high rate of late recurrence, suggesting difficulties in the surgical treatment of intractable epilepsy.
ISSN:1059-1311
1532-2688
DOI:10.1016/j.seizure.2020.09.019