Long-Term Full-Scale Intelligent Quotient Outcomes Following Pediatric and Childhood Epilepsy Surgery: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Author:

Arfaie Saman1ORCID,Amin Pouya2,Kwan Angela T.H.3,Solgi Arad4,Sarabi Ali5,Hakak-Zargar Benyamin6,Brunette-Clément Tristan7,Pushenko Denys8,Mir-Moghtadaei Kamran8,Mashayekhi Mohammad Sadegh9,Mofatteh Mohammad10,Honarvar Faraz11,Ren Lily Yuxi12,Noiseux-Lush Camille7,Azizi Zahra13,Pearl Phillip L.14,Baldeweg Torsten15,Weil Alexander7,Fallah Aria16

Affiliation:

1. McGill University

2. UC Berkeley

3. Ottawa University

4. York University

5. Arizona State University

6. Deakin University

7. University of Montreal

8. University of Toronto

9. University of British Columbia

10. Queen's University Belfast

11. Queen's University

12. Stanford Univeristy

13. Stanford University

14. Harvard University

15. University College London

16. Universityof California Los Angeles

Abstract

Abstract Objective: Cognitive measures are an important primary outcome of pediatric, adolescents, and childhood epilepsy surgery. The purpose of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to assess whether there are long-term alterations (≥ 5 years) in the Full-Scale Intelligence Quotient (FSIQ) of pediatric patients undergoing epilepsy surgery. Methods: Electronic databases (EMBASE, MEDLINE, and Scopus) were searched for English articles from inception to October 2022 that examined intelligence outcomes in pediatric epilepsy surgery patients. Inclusion criteria were defined as the patient sample size of ≥ 5, average follow- up of ≥5 years, and surgeries performed on individuals ≤ 18 years old at the time of surgery. Exclusion criteria consisted of palliative surgery, animal studies, and studies not reporting surgical or FSIQ outcomes. Publication bias was assessed using a funnel plot and the Quality in Prognosis Studies (QUIPS) toolset was used for quality appraisal of the selected articles. A random- effects network meta-analysis was performed to compare FSIQ between surgical patients at baseline and follow-up and Mean Difference (MD) was used to calculate the effect size of each study. Point estimates for effects and 95% confidence intervals for moderation analysis were performed on variables putatively associated with the effect size. Results: 21,408 studies were screened for abstract and title. Of these, 797 fit our inclusion and exclusion criteria and proceeded to full-text screening. Overall, seven studies met our requirements and were selected. Quantitative analysis was performed on these studies (N = 330). The mean long-term difference between pre- and post- operative FSIQ scores across all studies was noted at 3.36 [95% CI: (0.14, 6.57), p = 0.04, I2 = 0%] and heterogeneity was low. Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first meta-analysis to measure the long-term impacts of FSIQ in pediatric and adolescent epilepsy patients. Our overall results in this meta-analysis indicate that while most studies do not show long-term FSIQ deterioration in pediatric patients who underwent epilepsy surgery, the observed changes were not clinically significant. Moreover, at the individual patient level analysis, while most children did not show long-term FSIQ deterioration, few had significant decline. These findings indicate the importance of surgery as a viable option for pediatric patients with medically refractory epilepsy.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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