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  • Epilepsy surgery in infants...
    Roth, Jonathan; Constantini, Shlomi; Ekstein, Margaret; Weiner, Howard L.; Tripathi, Manjari; Chandra, Poodipedi Sarat; Cossu, Massimo; Rizzi, Michele; Bollo, Robert J.; Machado, Hélio Rubens; Santos, Marcelo Volpon; Keating, Robert F.; Oluigbo, Chima O.; Rutka, James T.; Drake, James M.; Jallo, George I.; Shimony, Nir; Treiber, Jeffrey M.; Consales, Alessandro; Mangano, Francesco T.; Wisoff, Jeffrey H.; Teresa Hidalgo, Eveline; Bingaman, William E.; Gupta, Ajay; Erdemir, Gozde; Sundar, Swetha J.; Benifla, Mony; Shapira, Vladimir; Lam, Sandi K.; Fallah, Aria; Maniquis, Cassia A. B.; Tisdall, Martin; Chari, Aswin; Cinalli, Giuseppe; Blount, Jeffrey P.; Dorfmüller, Georg; Christine Bulteau; Uliel‐Sibony, Shimrit

    Epilepsia (Copenhagen), August 2021, Letnik: 62, Številka: 8
    Journal Article

    Summary Objective Drug‐resistant epilepsy (DRE) during the first few months of life is challenging and necessitates aggressive treatment, including surgery. Because the most common causes of DRE in infancy are related to extensive developmental anomalies, surgery often entails extensive tissue resections or disconnection. The literature on “ultra‐early” epilepsy surgery is sparse, with limited data concerning efficacy controlling the seizures, and safety. The current study's goal is to review the safety and efficacy of ultra‐early epilepsy surgery performed before the age of 3 months. Methods To achieve a large sample size and external validity, a multinational, multicenter retrospective study was performed, focusing on epilepsy surgery for infants younger than 3 months of age. Collected data included epilepsy characteristics, surgical details, epilepsy outcome, and complications. Results Sixty‐four patients underwent 69 surgeries before the age of 3 months. The most common pathologies were cortical dysplasia (28), hemimegalencephaly (17), and tubers (5). The most common procedures were hemispheric surgeries (48 procedures). Two cases were intentionally staged, and one was unexpectedly aborted. Nearly all patients received blood products. There were no perioperative deaths and no major unexpected permanent morbidities. Twenty‐five percent of patients undergoing hemispheric surgeries developed hydrocephalus. Excellent epilepsy outcome (International League Against Epilepsy ILAE grade I) was achieved in 66% of cases over a median follow‐up of 41 months (19–104 interquartile range IQR). The number of antiseizure medications was significantly reduced (median 2 drugs, 1–3 IQR, p < .0001). Outcome was not significantly associated with the type of surgery (hemispheric or more limited resections). Significance Epilepsy surgery during the first few months of life is associated with excellent seizure control, and when performed by highly experienced teams, is not associated with more permanent morbidity than surgery in older infants. Thus surgical treatment should not be postponed to treat DRE in very young infants based on their age.