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Cognitive performance in distinct groups of children undergoing epilepsy surgery—a single-centre experience
Author(s) -
Barbora Beňová,
Anežka Bělohlávková,
Petr Ježdík,
Alena Jahodová,
Martin Kudr,
Vladimı́r Komárek,
Vilém Novák,
Petr Libý,
Robert P. Lesko,
Michal Tichý,
Martin Kynčl,
Josef Zámečnı́k,
Pavel Kršek,
Alice Maulisová
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.7790
Subject(s) - epilepsy , epilepsy surgery , neuropsychology , intelligence quotient , cognition , medicine , cohort , pediatrics , psychology , psychiatry
Background We aimed first to describe trends in cognitive performance over time in a large patient cohort ( n  = 203) from a single tertiary centre for paediatric epilepsy surgery over the period of 16 years divided in two (developing—pre-2011 vs. established—post-2011). Secondly, we tried to identify subgroups of epilepsy surgery candidates with distinctive epilepsy-related characteristics that associate with their pre- and post-surgical cognitive performance. Thirdly, we analysed variables affecting pre-surgical and post-surgical IQ/DQ and their change (post- vs. pre-surgical). Methods We analysed IQ/DQ data obtained using standardized neuropsychological tests before epilepsy surgery and one year post-surgically, along with details of patient’s epilepsy, epilepsy surgery and outcomes in terms of freedom from seizures. Using regression analysis, we described the trend in post-operative IQ/DQ. Cognitive outcomes and the associated epilepsy- and epilepsy surgery-related variables were compared between periods before and after 2011. Using multivariate analysis we analysed the effect of individual variables on pre- and post-operative IQ/DQ and its change. Results Epilepsy surgery tends to improve post-surgical IQ/DQ, most significantly in patients with lower pre-surgical IQ/DQ, and post-surgical IQ/DQ strongly correlates with pre-surgical IQ/DQ (Rho = 0.888, p  < 0.001). We found no significant difference in pre-, post-surgical IQ/DQ and IQ/DQ change between the periods of pre-2011 and post-2011 ( p  = 0.7, p  = 0.469, p  = 0.796, respectively). Patients with temporal or extratemporal epilepsy differed in their pre-surgical IQ/DQ ( p  = 0.001) and in IQ/DQ change ( p  = 0.002) from those with hemispheric epilepsy, with no significant difference in post-surgical IQ/DQ ( p  = 0.888). Groups of patients with different underlying histopathology showed significantly different pre- and post-surgical IQ/DQ ( p  < 0.001 and p  < 0.001 respectively) but not IQ/DQ change ( p  = 0.345).Variables associated with severe epilepsy showed effect on cognitive performance in multivariate model. Discussion Post-surgical IQ/DQ strongly correlates with pre-surgical IQ/DQ and greatest IQ/DQ gain occurs in patients with lower pre-surgical IQ/DQ scores. Cognitive performance was not affected by changes in paediatric epilepsy surgery practice. Pre- and post-operative cognitive performances, as well as patients’ potential for cognitive recovery, are highly dependent on the underlying aetiology and epileptic syndrome.

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