Influence of extent and age at corpus callosotomy on seizure outcomes. A single center experience

Author:

Chourasia Nitish1ORCID,Stone Scellig S. D.1,Tsuboyama Melissa1ORCID,Madsen Joseph R.1,Ryan Morgan23,Zhang Bo23,Libenson Mark H.1,Bolton Jeffrey1,Harini Chellamani1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Epilepsy and Clinical Neurophysiology, Department of Neurology Boston Children's Hospital Massachusetts Boston USA

2. Department of Neurology Boston Children’s Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Biostatistics and Research Design Center Institutional Centers for Clinical and Translational Research, Boston Children’s Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractCorpus callosotomy (CC) is a palliative treatment for drop seizures in patients with drug‐resistant nonlocalizable epilepsy. We compared drop seizure outcomes between patients undergoing anterior CC versus complete CC and examined factors impacting outcomes for drop seizures including age at CC and duration of epilepsy. A retrospective review of patients who underwent CC between 2003 and 2022 with a minimum of 6 months postsurgical follow‐up was included. Outcome measure for drop seizures included seizure reduction ≥50% from baseline as well as elimination of drop seizures. Thirty‐eight patients were included. Overall, ≥50% reduction in drop seizures occurred in nearly 70% (23 out of 33) patients with complete elimination in 58% (19 out of 33). Compared with anterior CC (n = 13), patients undergoing complete CC (n = 25) had increased likelihood of ≥50% reduction (p = 0.006) or elimination (p = 0.024) of drop seizures. Regression analysis showed that complete CC was the primary predictor for improved drop seizure outcomes (elimination, p = 0.014 or ≥50% reduction, p = 0.006), while age at CC and duration of epilepsy did not impact the outcomes. Compared to anterior CC, complete CC was significantly more likely to lead to improvement/freedom from drop seizures. Age at CC or duration of epilepsy did not influence drop seizure outcomes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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