EEG-Findings during long-term treatment with everolimus in TSC-associated and therapy-resistant epilepsies in children

•In children with TSC, EVO was effective in reducing EEG abnormalities.•Long-term treatment with EVO led to a further reduction of seizures and IED.•The decrease in IED during sleep was particularly striking.•The cessation of IED may be important for developmental progression. : This prospective obs...

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Veröffentlicht in:Seizure (London, England) England), 2022-12, Vol.103, p.101-107
Hauptverfasser: Wiegand, Gert, Japaridze, Natia, Gröning, Kristina, Stephani, Ulrich, Kadish, Navah E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•In children with TSC, EVO was effective in reducing EEG abnormalities.•Long-term treatment with EVO led to a further reduction of seizures and IED.•The decrease in IED during sleep was particularly striking.•The cessation of IED may be important for developmental progression. : This prospective observational study evaluated the long-term EEG changes in children treated with everolimus (EVO) for refractory TSC-associated epilepsy. Changes in EEG-abnormalities were related to developmental outcomes. : Thirteen children treated with EVO were examined for EEG-recorded seizures and interictal epileptic discharges (IED) during a 72-hour-video-EEG-monitoring, which was performed at baseline and repeated at follow-up intervals of at least 9 months. Antiseizure medication was left unchanged for at least 27 months. Changes in cognitive developmental parameters were related to reduction of seizures and IED at the last monitoring. : We found a significant reduction of recorded seizures and IED during sleep at the first as well as the last follow-up recording. The reduction of IED was especially prominent during sleep. For patients who continued for more than one monitoring under EVO (n = 8), number of seizures further decreased. In patients with developmental examination (n = 9), we observed that only (nearly) full cessation of IED was related to acquisition of new skills. : In children with TSC, EVO was effective in reducing recorded seizures and IED; long-term EVO treatment led to a more pronounced reduction and an improvement of nocturnal IED even when the patient was initially not seizure-free. Cessation of IED in children with developmental improvement may point to the importance of healthy sleep for cognition.
ISSN:1059-1311
1532-2688
DOI:10.1016/j.seizure.2022.10.022