Vivian L. Smith Department of Neurosurgery, Medical School, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
Epilepsia. 2013 Dec;54 Suppl 9:72-8. doi: 10.1111/epi.12448.
Resection strategies in patients with tumor-related epilepsy vary from lesionectomy to larger epilepsy operations with no consensus on optimal approaches. The objective of this study is to use our prior experience in the management of these patients, to derive optimal strategies for the surgical management of epilepsy related to brain tumors. A prospectively compiled database of epilepsy and tumor patients was used to identify patients who underwent surgical resection of a neoplasm but then developed epilepsy, or who presented with epilepsy and were found to harbor a brain tumor. Seizure frequency, histopathology, type of surgical resection, and outcomes were compiled. Of 235 epilepsy surgery patients and 75 low/intermediate grade glioma surgery patients, 13 (5.5%) and 21 (28%) patients, respectively, had tumoral epilepsy. Twenty-two patients were male and 18 tumors were in the left hemisphere. Tumoral epilepsy occurred predominantly in temporal (50%) and perirolandic (26.5%) locations. The etiology was WHO grade I tumors in 29%, grade II in 35%, and grade III in 33%. In the epilepsy group, following lesionectomy in three and tailored resections in the majority, seizure outcomes were Engel class I in all except one case. In the tumor group, after the initial operation seven additional resections were performed due to seizure recurrence. Outcomes in this group were Engel class 1A in 18 patients and 1B, 1C and IIA in 1 patient each. Drawing upon these data, we propose a classification of the likely reasons of failure in seizure control in patients with tumoral epilepsy. This review reiterates the concept that a complete resection of the lesion is the best approach for dealing with tumors presenting with epilepsy. Overall excellent outcomes can be accomplished following aggressive initial tumor resection, re-resection in the context of recurrence, and epilepsy style operations in selected patients with a longer history of seizures.
在肿瘤相关性癫痫患者中,切除策略从病灶切除术到更大的癫痫手术不等,对于最佳方法尚无共识。本研究的目的是利用我们在这些患者管理方面的先前经验,得出针对与脑瘤相关的癫痫的手术管理的最佳策略。使用前瞻性汇编的癫痫和肿瘤患者数据库,来确定接受肿瘤切除术但随后发生癫痫的患者,或表现出癫痫且发现脑瘤的患者。收集了发作频率、组织病理学、手术切除类型和结果。在 235 例癫痫手术患者和 75 例低/中级胶质瘤手术患者中,分别有 13 例(5.5%)和 21 例(28%)患者患有肿瘤性癫痫。22 名患者为男性,18 个肿瘤位于左半球。肿瘤性癫痫主要发生在颞叶(50%)和近皮质区(26.5%)。病因在 29%的患者中为 WHO 1 级肿瘤,35%的患者为 2 级肿瘤,33%的患者为 3 级肿瘤。在癫痫组中,在 3 例进行了病灶切除术,大部分进行了针对性切除术之后,除了 1 例以外,所有患者的癫痫发作结果均为 Engel 1 级。在肿瘤组中,由于癫痫复发,最初手术后又进行了 7 次额外的切除术。该组患者的结果为 Engel 1A 级 18 例,1B、1C 和 IIA 级各 1 例。根据这些数据,我们提出了一种肿瘤性癫痫患者癫痫控制失败的可能原因分类。本综述重申了这样一个概念,即对于出现癫痫的肿瘤,完全切除病灶是处理的最佳方法。通过积极的初始肿瘤切除术、在复发的情况下再次切除,以及在具有较长癫痫发作史的患者中进行癫痫样手术,可以实现整体的良好结局。