4.6 Article

Predictors of early postoperative epileptic seizures after awake surgery in supratentorial diffuse gliomas

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY
Volume 134, Issue 3, Pages 683-692

Publisher

AMER ASSOC NEUROLOGICAL SURGEONS
DOI: 10.3171/2020.1.JNS192774

Keywords

awake surgery; epileptic seizure; glioma; intraoperative; postoperative; oncology; epilepsy

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Functional-based resection under awake conditions has a low rate of intraoperative and early postoperative seizures, with good seizure outcomes at 6 months and 2 years postoperatively. Factors like treatment time of at least 3 months postoperatively, frontal lobe involvement, intraoperative current intensity, and supratotal resection are independently associated with early postoperative seizures.
OBJECTIVE Functional-based resection under awake conditions had been associated with a nonnegligible rate of intraoperative and postoperative epileptic seizures. The authors assessed the incidence of intraoperative and early post-operative epileptic seizures after functional-based resection under awake conditions. METHODS The authors prospectively assessed intraoperative and postoperative seizures (within 1 month) together with clinical, imaging, surgical, histopathological, and follow-up data for 202 consecutive diffuse glioma adult patients who underwent a functional-based resection under awake conditions. RESULTS Intraoperative seizures occurred in 3.5% of patients during cortical stimulation; all resolved without any pro-cedure being discontinued. No predictor of intraoperative seizures was identified. Early postoperative seizures occurred in 7.9% of patients at a mean of 5.1 +/- 2.9 days. They increased the duration of hospital stay (p = 0.018), did not impact the 6-month (median 95 vs 100, p = 0.740) or the 2-year (median 100 vs 100, p = 0.243) postoperative Karnofsky Perfor-mance Status score and did not impact the 6-month (100% vs 91.4%, p = 0.252) or the 2-year (91.7 vs 89.4%, p = 0.857) postoperative seizure control. The time to treatment of at least 3 months (adjusted OR [aOR] 4.76 [95% CI 1.38-16.36], p = 0.013), frontal lobe involvement (aOR 4.88 [95% CI 1.25-19.03], p = 0.023), current intensity for intraoperative mapping of at least 3 mA (aOR 4.11 [95% CI 1.17-14.49], p = 0.028), and supratotal resection (aOR 6.24 [95% CI 1.43-27.29], p = 0.015) were independently associated with early postoperative seizures. CONCLUSIONS Functional-based resection under awake conditions can be safely performed with a very low rate of intraoperative and early postoperative seizures and good 6-month and 2-year postoperative seizure outcomes. Intraop-eratively, the use of the lowest current threshold producing reproducible responses is mandatory to reduce seizure oc-currence intraoperatively and in the early postoperative period.

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