4.5 Article

Postoperative seizure freedom does not normalize altered connectivity in temporal lobe epilepsy

Journal

EPILEPSIA
Volume 58, Issue 11, Pages 1842-1851

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/epi.13867

Keywords

TLE; Epilepsy surgery; fcMRI; Functional network; Longitudinal

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [1K23NS085028]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR000448, KL2TR000450]
  3. Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences at Washington University [UL1RR024992]
  4. [1U54MH091657]

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Objectives: Specific changes in the functional connectivity of brain networks occur in patients with epilepsy. Yet whether such changes reflect a stable disease effect or one that is a function of active seizure burden remains unclear. Here, we longitudinally assessed the connectivity of canonical cognitive functional networks in patients with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), both before and after patients underwent epilepsy surgery and achieved seizure freedom. Methods: Seventeen patients with intractable TLE who underwent epilepsy surgery with Engel class I outcome and 17 matched healthy controls took part in the study. The functional connectivity of a set of cognitive functional networks derived from typical cognitive tasks was assessed in patients, preoperatively and postoperatively, as well as in controls, using stringent methods of artifact reduction. Results: Preoperatively, functional networks in TLE patients differed significantly from healthy controls, with differences that largely, but not exclusively, involved the default mode and temporal/auditory subnetworks. However, undergoing epilepsy surgery and achieving seizure freedom did not lead to significant changes in network connectivity, with postoperative functional network abnormalities closely mirroring the preoperative state. Significance: This result argues for a stable chronic effect of the disease on brain connectivity, with changes that are largely burned in by the time a patient with intractable TLE undergoes epilepsy surgery, which typically occurs years after the initial diagnosis. The result has potential implications for the treatment of intractable epilepsy, suggesting that delaying surgical intervention that may achieve seizure freedom may lead to functional network changes that are no longer reversible by the time of epilepsy surgery.

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