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Differences in pediatric and adult epilepsy surgery: A comparison at one center from 1990 to 2014
Author(s) -
Cloppenborg Thomas,
May Theodor W.,
Blümcke Ingmar,
Fauser Susanne,
Grewe Philip,
Hopf Johanna L.,
Kalbhenn Thilo,
Polster Tilman,
Schulz Reinhard,
Woermann Friedrich G.,
Bien Christian G.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
epilepsia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.687
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1528-1167
pISSN - 0013-9580
DOI - 10.1111/epi.14627
Subject(s) - medicine , epilepsy surgery , hippocampal sclerosis , epilepsy , cohort , etiology , pediatric epilepsy , pediatrics , surgery , histopathology , young adult , retrospective cohort study , cohort study , temporal lobe , pathology , psychiatry
Summary Objective Surgical volumes at large epilepsy centers are decreasing. Pediatric cohorts, however, show a trend toward more resections and superior outcome. Differences in pediatric and adult epilepsy surgery were investigated in our cohort. Methods The Bethel database between 1990 and 2014 was retrospectively analyzed. Results A total of 1916 adults and 1300 children underwent presurgical workup. The most common etiologies were medial temporal sclerosis (35.4%) in adults, and focal cortical dysplasias (21.1%) and diffuse hemispheric pathologies (14.7%) in children. Only 1.4% of the total cohort had normal histopathology. A total of 1357 adults (70.8%) and 751 children (57.8%) underwent resections. Surgery types for children were more diverse and showed a higher proportion of extratemporal resections (32.8%) and functional hemispherectomies (20.8%). Presurgical evaluations increased in both groups; surgical numbers remained stable for children, but decreased in the adult group from 2007 on. The patients’ decision against surgery in the adult nonoperated cohort increased over time (total = 44.9%, 27.4% in 1995‐1998 up to 53.2% in 2011‐2014; for comparison, in children, total = 22.1%, stable over time). Postsurgical follow‐up data were available for 1305 adults (96.2%) and 690 children (91.9%) 24 months after surgery. The seizure freedom rate was significantly higher in children than in adults (57.8% vs 47.5%, P < 0.001) and significantly improved over time ( P = 0.016). Significance Pediatric epilepsy surgery has stable surgical volumes and renders more patients seizure‐free than epilepsy surgery in adults. A relative decrease in hippocampal sclerosis, the traditional substrate of epilepsy surgery, changes the focus of epilepsy surgery toward other pathologies.